ya that extra little bit of air helps for sureRight, that’s why I askeded.....
You need recirc on all the times because of all that damn ash and heat.....
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ya that extra little bit of air helps for sureRight, that’s why I askeded.....
You need recirc on all the times because of all that damn ash and heat.....
how would the blower motor fan surging have anything to do with the r134 ?Mine was surging this summer in my ‘07 until I recharged the system properly. My system had a slow leak and I was topping it off with those gimmicky cans with a gauge from autozone. Neither the gimmick gauge or even a proper manifold gauge set will tell you if you have enough refrigerant in the system. It’s done by weight and not pressure. The only way to know if you have enough refrigerant in the system is to have it evacuated properly and then refill with precisely the amount (2.1 lbs in my case) of r-143a shown on the label on the radiator shroud placard. Mine was leaking past the Schrader valve on the low pressure side. Found the leak with soapy water and waited to replace the valve when I got home from a long trip (in our other Denali) because by then it was empty again. I drew a vacuum on the system, then refilled the system using manifold gauges and a postage scale. No more problems, blows ice cold air to spec and no more fan surging or leaks.
I asked myself the same question, and I don't know, but thought it would be helpful to report my experience. The only thing I can think of is that the state of low refrigerant leads to other implications, like perhaps the compressor and cooling fans are switching on and off more frequently, causing the electrical power to the blower to vary. The surge was on a cycle of between perhaps 5 and 10 seconds, but inconsistent and definitely noticeable.how would the blower motor fan surging have anything to do with the r134 ?
naw, not unless your battery was very very weak, I thought maybe I was missing some other reason. All the fan does is blow air, if it wasn't the resistor causing it then it would have to be a temperature sensor trying to keep the desired temperature by slowing or increasing the fan speed. even if the ac belt flew off or the compressor took a crap the fan inside would just keep on blowing air. In the winter time with the heater on it does slow/increase the fan speed automatically (on the automatic digital systems) to keep the desired temp but it is much more suttle.I asked myself the same question, and I don't know, but thought it would be helpful to report my experience. The only thing I can think of is that the state of low refrigerant leads to other implications, like perhaps the compressor and cooling fans are switching on and off more frequently, causing the electrical power to the blower to vary. The surge was on a cycle of between perhaps 5 and 10 seconds, but inconsistent and definitely noticeable.