So i just found out you cant put any freon into a prius. I just asked the parts store for the freon for my 05 prius and put in whatever It worked for a day or two then back to warm air blowing figured had a leak bought uv dye tried to put it in the system the gauge was in the red after I put it in green the last time i refilled it. That was about 3 weeks ago and ive been running the AC on full blast Is there suppose to be a specific light that turns on if the compressor is bad. Ik i will have to drain it out whats the best way for me to do that on my own.
You have to have 134a virgin pure nothing in it not the freon that's the problem it's the oil you need nd11 oil it doesn't conduct electricity . Kind of similar to the oil in the transmission. The freon is regular 134a ND 11oil
Don’t? seriously, I’d let dealership deal with it, disclose everything you’ve done as well. Show them the receipt for the “whatever” stuff, and the indicator dye.
It's probably not a leak, but some other type of failure... Hard to say at this point. Prius AC is a variable pressure system... You need to empty out the system and then put in the exact weight of refrigerant and the exact weight of lubricant. It's possible to DIY this with a scale minus weight of the empty cans, but pretty challenging stuff. Also folks have gotten away with adding/topping off with a small amount of the correct refrigerant without much issue, but at this point you need a vacuum pump to get the bad mixture out.
You'd think they could put a warning take at the injection port so everyone is aware that it is a variable pressure system and refrigerant must be added by weight, not by pressure. Think of how many people wouldn't of lost big money had they done that?
Informing people that doing what's "normal" maintenance on their vehicle will damage their car to the the tune of many thousands of dollars with a warning tag would be a reasonable consideration if your Toyota designers changed the AC to a variable pressure system and actually thought it through.
I'm not sure how much the variable-pressure aspect even has to do with it. Maybe more just that it's a small system, nothing like the cavernous ones in old cars taking pounds of refrigerant. A smaller-capacity system has a smaller range between not-enough and too-much, so getting it right is more critical. Pressure has always been a lousy way to tell how much refrigerant is in a system. Statically, for any amount that's enough for some to condense, the pressure just tells you the temperature, not the amount at all. In operation, with a two-gauge manifold you can learn more, but it's always been hard to beat measuring the right amount in. If I remember right, some late model Prii (maybe it started with the c?) have a function you can access in Techstream to tell if the refrigerant charge is correct, high, or low. The system has enough inputs (high-side pressure transducer, evaporator temperature, electric compressor power) that they must have figured out they could just have the HVAC amplifier do some math with all that and tell you. I'm bummed my 2010 doesn't have that.
Thanks.. This helps us better understand why Toyota doesn't bother with a warning label about pressure. Makes me suspect car makers and AC technicians don't really base the refrigerant added with a pressure reading when filling a system and the pressure is more an antiquated method of aftermarket refrigerent sellers because it's the least expensive and simplest way to do it.
I appreciate the results honestly, currently working on a project car, car still runs fine. been thinking of getting rid of the prius anyways for a civic. Ill see if its even worth fixing for me. thanks everyone