Thanks for that.Charles5654 wrote: ↑Sat Dec 10, 2022 6:11 am Since the temperature of the air coming out of the vents was 73F, I took the car to the dealer, thinking that there might be a refrigerant leak. After checking the AC system, they told me that there were no leaks and they made the following two statements in writing:
Quote
Cause: not building proper pressure and freezing up AC lines
Unquote
Quote
Found to have contamination in the system due to failing compressor
Unquote
The first statement could be caused by a low charge due to leakage, so I think you might have been correct in your original assessment. A 2003 model-year Civic (19 years old) could well have developed a leak or leaks anywhere—including in the original compressor—due to its age. As far as you know, was the system ever evaluated and/or recharged during the intervening years? Do you live in an area where chemicals are used to melt ice and snow in the wintertime?
As to the second statement, I wonder how they know the system is contaminated (by compressor debris) because the 1-1/2 year-old compressor has apparently not disintegrated internally. Their statement seems to suggest that they flushed one or more components and saw debris coming out, but I would guess that they didn't do so.
Presuming that the dealer installed the correct amount of oil and refrigerant on replacing the original compressor with a new unit, and the system then failed to cool 1-1/2 years later, I'm inclined to think that most of the refrigerant escaped due to a leak. Do you recall noticing a slow degradation of A/C performance over time?
Where to go from here? If you have a specialty MVAC shop with the appropriate certifications in your locale that could take a look at it, I would bring the car to them—as two consultants on this Forum suggested earlier—for another evaluation and opinion.