A/C Condenser: Replace or Not?

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by warlock162, Aug 4, 2007.

  1. warlock162

    warlock162 Guest

    I have a 1998 Honda Civic EX Sedan.

    Just two days ago, at about 184,000 miles, I had a new radiator and hoses
    put on (leaking problems).

    Even though the a/c condenser is still in working order, the fins are
    looking shady.

    Should I wait until it fails, or keep it while the going is good?
     
    warlock162, Aug 4, 2007
    #1
  2. warlock162

    maumee Guest

    Please define shady. If they are bent, there are tools that can be
    purchased that will straighten them enough for good air flow. If the
    condenser is dirty/plugged, use some cleaner such as simple green or
    any of the orange products and spray it will and then let it sit for a
    while and then use a hose with a spray nozzle and from the top to
    bottom hose the condenser down and you should get most of the dirt
    off. You may have to repeat the process. Don't shoot directly into the
    condenser or you will just blast the junk back into an area that is
    hard to get to. It is much easier to clean the condenser when you have
    the radiator out. You can then do a more complete job by puting the
    cleaner on the front and blast with the hose from the back of the
    condenser.You can also take it to an AC shop and they can do the job
    and the cost should not be excessive.
     
    maumee, Aug 5, 2007
    #2
  3. warlock162

    nm5k Guest

    I'd just keep running it. If it still seems to cool ok, it's good nuff
    for gov work. The definitive way to test would be to check the
    head pressure. "high side". Most would need to go to a shop
    to do that. But, if it ain't cycling off on the high pressure switch,
    I wouldn't worry about it. I wouldn't get a new coil unless you
    are sure you are going to keep that car a long time. At 184k,
    it's going to need other various work as it putts along..
    The price of a coil, with labor, etc, ain't worth it in my opinion.
    I might consider it if it were a real problem, and I knew I
    was going to keep the car. But you aren't having a real
    problem at this point. Be gentle if you try to wash the coil.
    When they get "flaky", it's easy to knock fins off with just the
    pressure of a water hose. I would leave it alone unless it's
    really filthy. And then just hose it "head on" Not at angles
    to the coil. That can blast fins away.
    MK
     
    nm5k, Aug 6, 2007
    #3
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