The air conditioning in my car stopped working again. After about 15 to 20 minutes the compressor stops blowing cold air. Its been repaired two times before. I will be taking it for repair for the 3rd time. When can I lemon the car?
I wrote a version of my experience below in reply. I do think all these problems due to leaky "charge port valve." I am inquiring about a possible recall or a way to fix all 14! valves.The air conditioning in my car stopped working again. After about 15 to 20 minutes the compressor stops blowing cold air. Its been repaired two times before. I will be taking it for repair for the 3rd time. When can I lemon the car?
It's using single AC unit to be cooling multiple modules, including cabin, battery, motors, electronics, so valves are needed to redistribute appropriately. Same thing like OctoValve unit in Tesla MY which Munro called one of the most essential inventions there.The mechanic said the I-Pace AC unit has 14 valves compared to the average of 2 on most gas cars. I asked why this was and he said he didnt know. <...> What I see is an electric engine that is relatively much lower maintenance and moving parts to gas cars -- why not make the AC abnormaly complex and filled with abnormalities, wrought with "issues"?
Yep, the problème is that devs and the 2 steps above them never actually saw a car.Given all software issues observed, whoever written that code should be banned from profession together with the management two levels up.
Mine is like this on a short drive it's fine on a long drive it is quite problematic. How long it takes to stop working seems dependant on the outside temperatureThe AC is back working again this morning on a short drive. Will update if the problem happens again.
After it has been charging it is likely to have been cooling the battery so if one or more of the valves are not working correctly it may manifest then.@electric-beagle Seems you have completely different issue. Can you elaborate about too long bolts though ? Any official SB ?
And double-checked with my wife - seems my estimate of "few times" was quite conservative. As per corrected info, it's closer to 50% chance (!) that it fails in the morning right after unplugging.
So this is likely to be (as it was for mine also where the AC effectively stopped working after 20 mins and was weak in those 20 mins), an issue of lack of gas in the system. Somehow the AC gas has at least partially escaped and is insufficient to provide continual AC.My A/C has cut out two more times now. It seems to occur after it's been working for about 20 mins. Today after my morning commute, left work after 2 hrs and it worked for 20 mins then I could feel the humidity building up in the car. I've also noticed that when it's not working, the loud fans that spin up when the car has stopped moving are not running. Stopped at Canadian Tire to shop for 20 mins and the ACs working again / fans spinning. Only other correlation is the 3 times it's happened it's been extremely hot and humid. Read somewhere about ice building up in a condenser?
Thanks for the info from the two of you. Will have it taken in to the dealer when I get a chance.If the system is low on refrigerant, it will expand too much and thus pull too much heat out of the air. This causes icing on the evaporator. This will block air flow. There's also a temperature sensor there that will signal the AC system to be shut off due to this condition.
So, you could have low refrigerant, faulty refrigerant pressure sensor, and/or a faulty temperature sensor.
Low refrigerant means there's a leak. There are three bulletins about leaks. One for the pipe-condenser connection bolt too long (add a washer), one for pipes-compressor bolts too long (replace bolts) and one for faulty valves where refrigerant is added and pressures checked (replace valves inner parts - like the core parts of a tire valve).
Does it mean that dumping a bit of a refrigerant will result in lower evaporator temperature ? Have another car which doesn't blow as cold as it used to, after AC compressor replacement (and I know there's no leak).If the system is low on refrigerant, it will expand too much and thus pull too much heat out of the air. This causes icing on the evaporator.
This was the problem with the A/C in my car. The very last repair (which I hope finally fixed it after two previous tries) was a leaky valve in the compressor.My A/C has cut out two more times now. It seems to occur after it's been working for about 20 mins. Today after my morning commute, left work after 2 hrs and it worked for 20 mins then I could feel the humidity building up in the car. I've also noticed that when it's not working, the loud fans that spin up when the car has stopped moving are not running. Stopped at Canadian Tire to shop for 20 mins and the ACs working again / fans spinning. Only other correlation is the 3 times it's happened it's been extremely hot and humid. Read somewhere about ice building up in a condenser?
Technically - yes, practically - unlikely.the author said he had permanent damage to his battery from this. Does this make sense?