Missing high side A/C port cap, & A/C inop 04 Tahoe

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

mattt

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2014
Posts
740
Reaction score
309
Last week I noticed my A/C was not blowing as cold as usual and figured it was low on refrigerant. Today I popped the hood to see if the compressor is still kicking on, which it is, but it's cycling on and off ever 20-30 seconds or so. I looked at the 2 charge ports on the horizontal line and what I believe is the high side port no longer has the black plastic cap on it. I did not remove it and no one else did either.

If the high side port is leaking, can it blow off that black plastic cap?

With this possible "leak" I would assume it's pointless to add refrigerant or the R134 in a can? These cans say they have leak seal in them but could they do anything for a faulty charge port?

Is there a write up for changing that high side port? is high side the one that is farther forward? The low side port is closer to the dryer?

Thanks.

P.S. This is the 2nd time I have seen an inop A/C and missing cap. A friends 01 Suburban had a missing cap a few years ago and the system was done.
 

OR VietVet

Multnomah Falls
Supporting Member
Military
Joined
Oct 8, 2014
Posts
20,739
Reaction score
36,623
Location
Willamette Valley
I have never seen a cap "blow off". They may be removed and accidentally not put back on or was not tight and vibrated off. You can add the refrigerant but I would put a vacuum on it and see if it holds vacuum. If not, then you have a leak. The low side port will be next to the accumulator/drier. They are different sized as well. Watch you gauges when you refill system.
 
OP
OP
M

mattt

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2014
Posts
740
Reaction score
309
I have never seen a cap "blow off". They may be removed and accidentally not put back on or was not tight and vibrated off. You can add the refrigerant but I would put a vacuum on it and see if it holds vacuum. If not, then you have a leak. The low side port will be next to the accumulator/drier. They are different sized as well. Watch you gauges when you refill system.

If I had not seen it twice now, I wouldn't believe it either. It 100% was not removed and accidentally no put back on. I am the only one under my hood and I've had no reason to take the cap off. I saw it first happen a few years ago on my parents 2001 Suburban and it was right around the time the A/C gave up the ghost. Now my 2004 Tahoe did the same thing. Possible it vibrated off, but the coincidence is pretty surprising if so.

Thank you for the suggestions on pullilng a vacuum on the system. I'd say I definitely have a leak as with the missing cap gone, I looked down in the port and it has an oily/wet appearance. I'd say my leak is the high pressure port based upon observations. Thanks again.

Anyone else had the missing cap coincide with your A/C system give up the ghost?
 

OR VietVet

Multnomah Falls
Supporting Member
Military
Joined
Oct 8, 2014
Posts
20,739
Reaction score
36,623
Location
Willamette Valley
The caps thread on. That pressure to blow that cap off would need to be immense. The cap is a cover. The leak may not be there at the schrader valve and you are seeing crud in there that is because of the cap being gone. Make sure when you empty the system that you either replace the schrader valves or remove, clean and reinstall. You will need the correct schrader valve tool for that.
 

OneofFew

Full Access Member
Joined
Jun 25, 2018
Posts
240
Reaction score
79
Location
Talullah Falls, Ga
The high side port fails frequently to where I made a habit of it to replace it during any service that entails evacuating the system. I frequently see it not sealing again after connecting my gauge set. Sometimes it can be made to seal just by working the valve a bit (connecting and disconnecting the gauge set). It screws out of the line. Be careful not to damage the line in the process. The low side port has a schraeder valve that can be replaced quite simply by using a valve core tool and removing the old and replacing with new. It is possible to replace the low side schraeder valve core with the system pressurized using a special tool, but no such luck on the high side.
Whenever you see dirt in the service port, you can assume that dirt will cause the valve to fail to seal after A/C service. clean it out and always replace the caps.
 

Trkr-ma

TYF Newbie
Joined
Jun 25, 2023
Posts
3
Reaction score
1
Last week I noticed my A/C was not blowing as cold as usual and figured it was low on refrigerant. Today I popped the hood to see if the compressor is still kicking on, which it is, but it's cycling on and off ever 20-30 seconds or so. I looked at the 2 charge ports on the horizontal line and what I believe is the high side port no longer has the black plastic cap on it. I did not remove it and no one else did either.

If the high side port is leaking, can it blow off that black plastic cap?

With this possible "leak" I would assume it's pointless to add refrigerant or the R134 in a can? These cans say they have leak seal in them but could they do anything for a faulty charge port?

Is there a write up for changing that high side port? is high side the one that is farther forward? The low side port is closer to the dryer?

Thanks.

P.S. This is the 2nd time I have seen an inop A/C and missing cap. A friends 01 Suburban had a missing cap a few years ago and the system was done.
How I remember, is the high port is the one that is LOW, if you look in your hood, it's to the left down low. ( LOW IS HIGH, HIGH IS LOW) I'm troubleshooting my air also. I just put a cap on today hoping that is the problem. I'm thoroughly troubleshooting before I go gun ** and buy the freon. I had a recall on it. It's a 2017 Tahoe and the dealership completely replaced everything. So I'm hoping there's no leak. The guy at the Chevrolet dealership said you shouldn't have to recharge the air conditioner in a Tahoe. Which sounded a little funny to me because I've never heard that on any type of vehicle. Also I'm getting mixed messages on what Freon to put in. It says r1234yf or
r1234 a. (I'll check under hood) When I search online. I have yet to call the dealership to have them check records on what they put in it upon replacement. Because I've read also that you shouldn't mix the two different freons together. I was hoping I wouldn't have to vacuum it. Also, I'm thinking that vacuuming is normal protocol to do it right. I don't have all the equipment to do it that way and I don't want to pay somebody an arm and a leg to do what I could do and learn at the same time. Then on the other hand I don't want to screw it up and have a bigger expense. Any and all suggestions are welcome.
 
OP
OP
M

mattt

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2014
Posts
740
Reaction score
309
And he is asking completely different questions than the thread was about.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,332
Posts
1,866,183
Members
96,951
Latest member
Russell99yukon
Top