A few weeks ago I took the truck out and the AC wouldn't cool. After driving a few miles and perhaps turning on and off one or more times, it started working fine.
Yesterday it repeated the problem except it never recovered in 30-45 minutes of driving. When turning the AC on and off I do not hear the compressor start and there is no change in engine RPM. I looked for the compressor but it appears it is underneath stuff and only accessible from underneath. My code reader does not have the capability to test or report anything about the AC system.
Probably an unrelated symptom, but when I cranked the truck the outside temperature was displayed as 62 degrees when it was over 80. Over the course of 15-20 minutes it slowly came up to the proper temperature.
I do not hear any activity when changing from cool to heat and back. Is there a door that diverts air from the heater core to the evap, or does the air go through the evap all the time?
I am assuming either a refrigerant leak resulting in a low pressure cutoff, a clutch failure, or something in the control system.
Other than a fuse, is there anything I can easily check before finding an AC repair shop? We moved three years ago and I don't have a list of go-tos yet.
Thanks,
Al
Yesterday it repeated the problem except it never recovered in 30-45 minutes of driving. When turning the AC on and off I do not hear the compressor start and there is no change in engine RPM. I looked for the compressor but it appears it is underneath stuff and only accessible from underneath. My code reader does not have the capability to test or report anything about the AC system.
Probably an unrelated symptom, but when I cranked the truck the outside temperature was displayed as 62 degrees when it was over 80. Over the course of 15-20 minutes it slowly came up to the proper temperature.
I do not hear any activity when changing from cool to heat and back. Is there a door that diverts air from the heater core to the evap, or does the air go through the evap all the time?
I am assuming either a refrigerant leak resulting in a low pressure cutoff, a clutch failure, or something in the control system.
Other than a fuse, is there anything I can easily check before finding an AC repair shop? We moved three years ago and I don't have a list of go-tos yet.
Thanks,
Al