System Description: Notes
WARNING: This page is about a different car, the 2011 Acura TL, 2010 Acura TL, and 2009 Acura TL. However, it is still accessible from the selected car via links, so may be relevant.
The air conditioning (A/C) system removes heat from the passenger compartment by transferring heat from the ambient air to the evaporator The A/C refrigerant expands in the evaporator, and the evaporator becomes very cold and absorbs the heat from the ambient air The blower fan pushes air across the evaporator where the heat is absorbed, and then it blows the cool air into the passenger compartment
This vehicle uses HFC-134a (R-134a) refrigerant, which does not contain chlorofluorocarbons Pay attention to the following service items
- Do not mix refrigerants CFC-12 (R-12) and HFC-134a (R-134a) They are not compatible
- Use only the recommended polyalkyleneglycol (PAG) refrigerant oil (DENSO ND-OIL 8) designed for the R-134a A/C compressor Intermixing the recommended (PAG) refrigerant oil with any other refrigerant oil will result in A/C compressor failure
- All A/C system parts (A/C compressor, discharge line, suction line, evaporator, A/C condenser, receiver/dryer, expansion valve, O-rings for joints) are designed for refrigerant R-134a Do not exchange with R-12 parts
- Use a halogen gas leak detector designed for refrigerant R-134a
- R-12 and R-134a refrigerant servicing equipment are not interchangeable Use only a recovery/recycling/charging station that is U L - listed and is certified to meet the requirements of SAE J2210 to service the R-134a air conditioning systems
- Always recover refrigerant R-134a with an approved recovery/recycling/charging station before disconnecting any A/C fitting