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Prius C AC condenser replace and recarge

Discussion in 'Prius c Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by DWGpriusC, Apr 11, 2017.

  1. DWGpriusC

    DWGpriusC New Member

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    Its not really a 2 hour job. Its a 15 minute job that requires the equipment to be hooked up to equipment for 2 hours on the evac/recharge. The evac/recharge isn't $100 in supplies its $30 if you buy the stuff yourself and I'm guessing a Toyota dealer would get it a lot cheaper since they buy in bulk. The mechanic isn't doing 2 hours of actual work only 15 minutes of hands on and they can easily do something else such as work on another car while the vacuum runs. The condenser is slightly more involved physically as you have to remove a little bit of equipment and then put it back together, but a good mechanic could easily do it in 30 minutes if I learned with no prior knowledge in an hour. This part is almost impossible to screw up as long as you don't lose parts and can remember where a few pieces go. Maybe $400 isn't much money to you, but its a lot of money to me. And $865 for a full repair with condenser on a car that cost $17,000 brand new seems like an awful lot for such a simple job. Just my opinion and others may vary. I have definitely been known for being cheap, but in this case I really feel like the dealer didn't even try to help me out on a car I bought from them less than a year from when the incident occurred that was well under warranty. If you spend some time researching you will find Honda even recently settled a class action law suit regarding ac condensers not adequately protected and prone to early failure where they had to back pay for all the repairs.
     
    #21 DWGpriusC, May 2, 2017
    Last edited: May 2, 2017
  2. Sean Nelson

    Sean Nelson Active Member

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    Fair enough - that wasn't clear to me from your summary of the costs, perhaps my fault for not reading carefully enough (a bad habit of mine).

    I think it's a mistake to conflate repair costs with the purchase cost of the car. Even cheap cars can need expensive repairs.

    I've learned to budget for repairs. My habit is to buy a car and run it into the ground, so I put aside some money every month for repairs, even in the early years when the maintenance cost is low. Then when something happens and I get a repair bill I don't sweat it because I already have the money set aside. When the car is at the end of its useful life I take whatever money is left in my repair fund and add it to my "next car fund" to buy the next car.
     
  3. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    Glad to hear your car was fixed successfully! I'm hoping mine will be just as easy.
     
  4. DWGpriusC

    DWGpriusC New Member

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    I'm curious how much Freon yours ends up taking because I still don't know why mine only took 7.1 oz. 3 Days of great cooling and no issues which is about 90 minutes of driving per day, but that 7.1 oz thing is still really bugging me. Repair guide said it should take 16.6. Good luck!

    Both of you are right I should budget for repair. I just don't expect at all to get hit with a nearly $1000 repair in the first year I own a car while its under warranty and it really bothered me. This is the first time its ever happened to me in 21 years of driving. The only other major repair I've ever had was all covered under warranty at with no issues at all.
     
    #24 DWGpriusC, May 2, 2017
    Last edited: May 2, 2017
  5. Matt H

    Matt H Active Member

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    Warranty is for defects in the vehicle. Why on earth would you expect the dealer to warranty the AC condenser when it was hit by a rock? That has nothing to do with a defect in the car. It has nothing to do with Toyota. You're "$1000 repair in the first year" was simple bad luck. Like getting hit by another car at an intersection. Would you expect them to warranty that?

    The low-side and high side pressures have nothing to do with the system being "full." The only way to know how much refrigerant is in a system is to remove and weigh it. Then you vacuum it down, and charge the specified amount. The dealer techs know this, but more on that later.

    Here's a side effect of your grossly undercharged system: The ND11 oil is carried through the system in the refrigerant. This is critical to lubrication of components throughout the system, including the compressor. Evaporated refrigerant entering the compressor is also critical in cooling the compressor. Keep driving it with a low refrigerant charge, and there's a good chance the compressor will prematurely fail. That's a tick over $1,500. The good news is that with a burned up compressor, you also get to replace the evaporator, condenser, remove and flush all the lines, and on and on. Hopefully, the electrical short that's bound to happen (refrigerant cools the electric motor, too), doesn't take out the inverter, too.

    Starting to see why the dealer charges good money for these tasks you labeled as simple and cheap. You say it was cheap and easy, but you did it wrong, and you're heading down the road to a very expensive repair. The dealer charges "big" money because they have to buy expensive equipment to do the job correctly, and they have to pay people with the education and knowledge to do the job correctly.
     
  6. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    Today I decided to do the condenser install because I don't work until 2. Here's my photos from the process. The process is very easy. It goes in from the top. Mostly trim panel clips and several 10mm bolts.

    01_bumpercover.jpg 02_trimpiece.jpg 03_crossbar.jpg 04_radiator_top.jpg 05_ratchet.jpg 06_lines.jpg

    You can see how much damage my OEM condenser has taken over the last 3 years. It's very unprotected. On the right is the new Sunbelt one from Amazon. The new condenser did indeed include the desiccant bag in the built-in receiver/dryer.

    Put 1.5oz of oil into my condenser, and lubricated all involved o-rings with ND-11 oil. Interestingly, many A/C techs recommend mineral oil to lubricate the o-rings on non-hybrid systems that use PAG. I don't want any contamination at all so ND-11 only for me.

    07_old.jpg 03_condenser.jpg

    Tomorrow I'll be doing the vacuum and charging.

    Matt H - I wouldn't expect a low charge to damage the compressor. The evaporator will freeze up due to low pressure first. The low pressure cutoff switch will shutdown the system if the pressure gets really low. The correct way to get the car running with the proper amount is comparison of the ambient temperature with a pressure chart for R-134a. If they system takes a different amount - it takes a different amount. Slightly low pressure can actually result in better cooling performance, but at the risk of freezing up part or all of the evaporator in certain situations. It's just basic A/C knowledge.

    Lower pressure is far better than overcharging which COULD result in damage to the system - but again - there's a high-pressure switch that will shut the compressor off if this happens as well. The damage resulting from high pressure will probably manifest itself as leaks from weak points in the system.

    I wouldn't expect the failure mode of a seized compressor to lead to an electrical short. Toyota engineers test every component for failure modes, since a short circuit could potentially cause a fire, there are probably engineered protection mechanisms such as fusible links to protect the A/C inverter and the main inverter from damage.
     
    #26 TheTimob, May 4, 2017
    Last edited: May 4, 2017
  7. Matt H

    Matt H Active Member

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    In addition to owning a hybrid specialist repair shop in a country where almost half the cars on the road are hybrids, I also have a full-time day job - ME, specifically HVAC. Also 609 certified, 608 Universal certified. ASE Master, L1, L3, member SAE, etc.

    The evaporator won't freeze up, as the evap. temperature is monitored. The danger in having low refrigerant charge is, as I stated above, that the oil migrates through the system in the refrigerant. Less refrigerant means less oil flow. Refrigerant also cools the compressor, and less refrigerant means less cooling (see more below).

    Refrigerant leaving the evaporator is also cooling the compressor. In a Toyota hybrid this is super-critical, as it has another job, which is cooling the electric motor part of the compressor (refrigerant flows through the motor). Less refrigerant (this guy put in half), is less cooling medium. An evaporator discharge temperature of 30°F can happen with a correct charge, or a low charge. The difference is that there is less refrigerant. The delta-T is higher when measured at the compressor inlet with a low charge, but more critical is the volume. Think of a hot-wire MAF with an ambient temperature of 30°F. At idle, or WOT at 5,000 rpm, the temperature measured in the MAF is the same, but the hot wire doesn't cool as much, as there's less volume flowing through it. There is less cooling medium (R134a) to cool the components. In some heavy-duty non-automotive systems with electric compressors, we run compressor motor temperature probes, compressor discharge temperature probes, etc. When the compressor motor temperature reaches a set point, we open a LLSV, which leads to an expansion valve, and injects liquid refrigerant into the compressor inlet to cool the compressor. We also use stepper-motor E-TXV's for precise refrigerant metering, as it's a delicate balance between cooling the compressor, and slugging it with too much liquid.

    You can go substantially under and over charge without seeing a difference in pressures that will lead to low or high pressure shut down. You can not determine how much refrigerant is in the system by pressures. If you have your MACS cert, you should know this. The ONLY way is to charge the system with the correct amount of refrigerant. The design of the system determines how much refrigerant it gets.

    I've replaced plenty of Toyota AC compressor's for mechanical failure, and electrical failure. So far, all have been from someone who doesn't know what they're doing... Phase to phase short, or phase to ground short from winding insulation degradation from heat, the wrong oil contamination, etc. The ECU will disable the system when it senses any kind of short, over-current, undercurrent, etc. Exactly the same way it does when is senses this in the HSD. However, sometimes it takes out the inverter, too. A mechanical failure in the compressor (lack of oil) will send metal debris through the motor, and sometimes kills that part of the compressor, too. As the compressor wears slowly from lack of lubrication, this debris can kill the motor before the compressor stops compressing.

    Oil charge: Critical.
    Refrigerant charge: Critical.

    There are no fusible links in the HV system. Leads go directly from the inverter to the different motors. There is sensing circuitry to tell the ECU's if there is a problem somewhere. It's not often that a compressor failure takes out the inverter, but it does happen. They don't "blow up," or catch on fire. It's a simple matter of a cap or IGBT being damaged to a point where it no longer functions within design parameters, and will set a code/shut down until it's replaced.

    Bottom line: There's a correct way to do it. It's spelled out in black and white int he SI. Not doing it correctly in a Toyota AC system runs a large risk of a very big repair bill.


    Hope that helps.
     
  8. Sean Nelson

    Sean Nelson Active Member

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    Forgive my ignorance, but wouldn't a leak also cause low pressure of the coolant? And aren't leaks a rather commonplace problem? So wouldn't the system be designed to shut itself off before the pressure dropped to the point where it could cause damage or, certainly, safety concerns?
     
  9. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    Great information! Thanks for the reply.

    I actively try to repair everything that I own myself. From the clothes dryer, to the deck, each car, computers, old software. It's about self-sufficiency. It's about the sense of accomplishment when it works again. It's about not burdening others with problems I could have fixed. The DIY spirit is why I joined these forums. Sharing knowledge of what works and what doesn't is an awesome thing.

    But it's mainly about something else: the technicians here generally don't have the same work ethic that you have in your country. They are only interested in getting cars out. Only interested in making 100 flat rate hours a week. Perhaps they'll use power tools to disassemble the car, loose a few bolts. Get a 3 hour job done in 45 minutes. Perhaps they'll pull a vacuum for only 5 minutes because who's gonna know. Whack em for a coolant flush. Whack em for a cabin filter. Get paid. I would like to think that a dealership would have the best, and most by-the-book employees out there. There are lots of brilliant dealer techs, but there are far more that don't care. I've worked with those guys. At my dealer- I was the only one who insisted on being honest. And at the end of the week- I made the least hours. The ethical questions are actually one of the main reasons I left the industry.
     
  10. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    Have the vacuum pump running now on brand new pump oil. I bought a new set of manifold gauges and hoses that are going to be hybrid only - they will never be used on my other cars.
    09_vacuumpump.jpg

    The altitude is things interesting. I'm at 9005ft altitude. My atmospheric pressure here is 10.5psi vs the 14.7 at sea level. Instead of 29.9in/hg of vacuum at sea level, I'm looking for 21.4in/hg of vacuum at this altitude which will be the maximum I can attain.
    08_gauges_vacuum.jpg
     
  11. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    Charging was successful. Opening the low side valve, refrigerant flowed in right away, and the compressor clicked on and started taking more in. It took about half the can in less than 5 minutes. Total - my car took an entire 12oz can, plus just slightly over 2oz of the second one.

    The car's capacity is 420g +- 50g according to the underhood label.
    That's equivalent to 14.8oz +- 1.7oz

    Mine is probably slightly under, but still within spec - but the pressures look perfect, and the vent outlet temperature is somewhere around 36°F.

    It took a LONG TIME to get it to take the full amount. I charged on the low side with the A/C on LO auto. I took the opportunity to clean all the windows while I was waiting. The charge process took just over an hour.
     
  12. DWGpriusC

    DWGpriusC New Member

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    I rechecked the low side pressure 3 days in a row after doing the job and every day it was 36 right in spec. If the system is undercharged it is showing 0 signs, but I guess pressure doesn't matter? The AC Pro guide seemed to indicate the system could be recharged based on pressure alone. As far as the dealer covering the rock ding I would argue they have done absolutely nothing to protect the condenser from this type of damage. i wasn't driving off road or in an accident. They could easily install a mesh behind the grill and this would be a non issue as no decent size rock would get through the grill. I didn't even know a rock hit the unit until I took it in and they told me. This wasn't an "accident" which would be a larger bill and covered by insurance, but it was a failure on the part of Toyota to design the system properly for standard road conditions. Again look up Honda class action law suit about the same issue... Honda Lost. I'm sure you see this issue a lot at your shop so that only proves that Toyota isn't doing much to prevent it. I'm sure it wouldn't be great for business, but at the very minimum they could cover a brand new car still under warranty for their failure to design a more protected system. At the point I was at with the dealer given their absurd price on a brand new car they sold me less than 12 months prior I was either living without AC or doing the job myself. I'm glad I chose to do it myself as I haven't had AC for 3 months and now it is working flawlessly. If the condenser goes down at some point I will definitely get rid of the car or live without AC, but I won't ever pay a dealer $1000 for a job that can easily be done for $100 especially at $135 an hour for labor.

    Timob you mentioned that it took an hour to charge your system. Was your low side pressure already at 36 5 min into the process? Going strictly based on low side pressure which has a ranged listed of 21 to 36 I'm afraid to put more into the system as it would raise that pressure too high. I know I put 7.1 oz into the system because I measured it. Should I go pick up another can and hold the trigger until I get another 9 ounces into the system?
     
    #32 DWGpriusC, May 5, 2017
    Last edited: May 5, 2017
  13. xliderider

    xliderider Senior Member

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    Finally got some pics of the mesh behind the grill:

    1494363831073.jpg

    1494363843184.jpg

    Lol, it's good at stopping leaves. You can see that it will stop or at least slow down larger rocks that fit through the regular grill openings.
     
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  14. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    My pressures did look pretty good very quickly, and the AC sounded and acted normal after less than 5 minutes. My high side pressure was lower than the expected level though, so I kept going. Since I'm at high altitude, I wasn't quite sure if I could trust charging by pressure alone, so I waited until the correct weight was charged, while monitoring the pressures.

    When I worked in the shop and had access to the fancy AC machines, I'd usually charge liquid in the high side with the car off, mainly because it was faster. Those machines have big tanks and very accurate scales. Since I'm working on my own car in a driveway, I figured a longer low side gas charge would be better out of my little cans.

    xliderider- that looks great- that's how it should be from the factory! I was behind a gravel truck yesterday and I was really hoping my new condenser wouldn't get hit!
     
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  15. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    I went with black fiberglass "pet resistant" window screen. It's extremely subtle, and you can barely see it even a couple of feet away.
    06_upperdone.jpg

    Took the bumper off. It's pretty easy - clips on the top, many 10mm bolts on the bottom, and the clips on either end.
    01_bumper_off.jpg
    Here's how I attached the mesh. Just zipties. I drilled holes in places that won't be visible from the outside for some of the zipties. I expect that this mesh will take many hits and will probably have to be replaced after a few years..
    03_lower.jpg 04_ziptie_detail.jpg
     
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  16. xliderider

    xliderider Senior Member

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    The mesh is very fine though. It will prevent air from moving freely through the grill openings. At least you don't live in a hot climate like desert or hot and humid weather.
     
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  17. TheTimob

    TheTimob Member

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    I'll be keeping an eye on the temperature with my scangauge to see how much this affects my cooling performance.
     
  18. DWGpriusC

    DWGpriusC New Member

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    I was able to put another 8.9 oz into mine bringing total up to exactly 16 oz. It cooled down a little in SoCal so when I initially charged it was in the 90s, but this morning while recharging it was mid 50s and it only took about 20 min. That said Low side pressure seems to have more to do with outside temp than the amount of Freon in the system because my low side pressure was only around 33-34 this morning and didn't go up at all when I more than doubled the amount of R134A in the system. From what I read on the AC Pro recommendation they seemed to indicated all that mattered is pressure... clearly not the case. System is still blowing out cold air and no noticeable difference between half charge and full charge of Freon which I find surprising. I hope the information in this thread helps anyone else who decided they want to try this job. Thanks for all the help and recommendations and hopefully soon I will be installing my mesh protector.
     
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  19. Sonic_TH

    Sonic_TH Active Member

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    Did it affected the cooling performance of your Prius C by any means?
     
  20. Adam Foldi

    Adam Foldi Junior Member

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    Hey there! Not sure if you'll see this because it was so long ago, but what did you do to remove the condenser? Did you have to remove the entire front bumper? About to do this job myself, as the dealer told me I had a small leak in my condenser and wanted 1100$ for the job. No thanks!!