2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
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2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
The passenger's side blows ice cold, temperature is about 50 degrees. The driver's side is much warmer at 70 degrees. I've removed the driver's side blend actuator and manually rotated the blend door fully in each direction and the temp will only get hot or just cool. I've checked the refrigerant level and added a can of refrigerant which brought the overall temp down but there is still a significant difference between the driver and passenger side. My guess is that the blend door is not sealing off the heat well enough. Anyone else experience anything like this or have any other ideas?
Re: 2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
My guess is that you have half a charge of refrigerant and the inlet of evaporator feeds the passenger side and there is nothing left over to boil off on the driver's side of evaporator-- seen it many times always the driver's side warm first when losing charge. Fix is to discharge, recover and weigh to prove loss of refrigerant, then find and fix your leak, then recharge to factory spec and be cool on both sides...
Re: 2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
Any idea what the spec would be on a 2001 Olds Aurora? I've already added a can of refrigerant. The passenger side got colder but the driver stayed about the same.
Re: 2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
A simple "Google search" for olds aurora refrigerant capacity yields 28 ounces for a 2001 model-- sure would wish everyone would use the searches available online--
Re: 2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
I did search for it online and got anywhere from 32 to 35 ounces. I cannot find any site that references 28 ounces.
Re: 2001 Olds Aurora blow warmer air on driver's side
EXACTLY the strategy I'm now using on my own 1988 B2200.GM Tech wrote:Fix is to discharge, recover and weigh to prove loss of refrigerant, then find and fix your leak, then recharge to factory spec and be cool on both sides...
The mechanic recovered and weighted the refrigerant, showed it was low at least 6 oz., and he added UV dye. So if the refrigerant level drops again, UV dye should be be able to seen and such component repaired/replaced.