[Vwdiesel] Manual AC cycling
LBaird119 at aol.com
LBaird119 at aol.com
Sun Jul 19 01:25:27 PDT 2009
In a message dated 7/18/2009 1:36:50 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
tadc at europa.com writes:
> Now I've never heard a technical explanation as to *why* this is, but I
> assume it's something like this: when you turn off the unit, it's still
> got
> a full head of pressure in the system. If you were to turn it back on
> immediately, the electric motor driving the compressor would have too much
> load and risk overheating or overloading or whatever. Waiting 3 minutes
> allows the system pressure to drop.
Yup, that's why electrical compressors have a load/heat bi-metal
cutout on the body of the compressor. Too much load or too hot
and it clicks open. You have to wait for the pressure to equalize
so the load is reduced.
>
>
> Why do I ask? Because I enjoy the benefits of AC, but I don't like the
> MPG
> penalty. I sometimes try manually cycling it so it only runs during
> MPG-optimal times, such as when decellerating, braking or coasting
> downhill,
> but I wonder about the wear-and-tear penalty on the system.
>
Automotive systems don't see quite the same load. Load comes
from pressure diferential and volume. Most electrical systems (other
than whole house) tend to equalize more slowly due to the lesser
volume of refrigerant cycled through the system over a given period
of time. More volume, more btu's transferred. Also many systems
you're familiar with are for freezing rather than cooling, thus a higher
pressure differential.
R-12 automotive systems run about 30psi on the low side and
120 to 140 on the high. The needles move about 10 degrees/second
as soon as the clutch disengages. The pressures equalize rather
rapidly. The closer they get the slower they equalize but it's still
fast.
Cycling mostly puts wear on the clutch. It's rare to ever see
the friction material worn out on one though.
Loren
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