I had a similar problem with my previous (GE8) Honda Fit, though that was because road debris would pummel the low-mounted condenser.
My fix was to avoid driving it for an extended period–which worked well most of the time, actually.
Photography by David S. Wallens
Not having air conditioning in Florida can be a bit, well, sticky, especially during the summer months.
The a/c in our E46-chassis BMW has been lukewarm at best. Sometimes it just seemed to stop blowing altogether.
We’re not a/c experts, but we know one: Jesse Spiker at Spiker Motorsports.
Plus he has the necessary equipment.
Step one: Hook the car to his Mastercool mobile charging station, a droid-like recovery/recycle/recharge machine.
The machine, magically, extracts and measures the refrigerant. If the volume or pressure is low, for example, the machine will tell the technician.
While Jesse waited for the machine to do its thing, we wondered how much this was going to cost us. Leaking line? Failing compressor? Poltergeists?
The machine finished its work and revealed the news: Everything looked good. We had a full load of refrigerant while our pressures were spot-on. Jesse then refilled the system.
Our reward for this little recycle: cold air blasting from the vents with no problems during a subsequent hour-long drive. On an 89-degree day with 60% humidity that feels like a 98-degree day, we’re getting 47-degree air from the vents while parked.
Jesse said that he’s seen other cars favorably respond to purging and refilling the refrigerant.
I had a similar problem with my previous (GE8) Honda Fit, though that was because road debris would pummel the low-mounted condenser.
My fix was to avoid driving it for an extended period–which worked well most of the time, actually.
I've got a pretty good understanding of ac systems and I don't think your symptoms line up with a properly charged system that was just evacd and recharged
Unless it tripped a digital bit in the car's body module when it was refilled, the service makes no sense.
I was never satisfied with the performance of the A/C in my E82. Even with a fresh recharge from my indy's fancy machine, it just didn't do what it should. There was clearly a very small leak somewhere, as performance degraded to the point that it didn't do much of anything about once a year. I finally bit the bullet this year and had the evaporator and the expansion valve replaced. That fixed it. The A/C now pumps consistently cold air the way it should. Not to say that's the situation with yours, but even if you don't want to do the evaporator, changing the expansion valve might be a quick and relatively cheap thing to try if performance degrades again.
Absolutely my least favorite DIY. Think I have worked on 4 vehicles of mine and to this day the rumor is I havent fixed a single one.
DAMN that e46 reminds me of my old Avus e36. Loved that dang color.
NOHOME said:Unless it tripped a digital bit in the car's body module when it was refilled, the service makes no sense.
I know. We're baffled as well.
And because we all love details.
Jesse's shop is half an hour away. Drove home with the a/c on and no problems.
Later that day, I had to run an errand–which happened to put me like around the corner from his shop. So, that was an hour in the car with cold a/c.
And then add in the minutes idling yesterday so I could take those pics of the thermometer.
So far–fingers crossed–so good.
I have a theory that the removed and replaced refrigerant is filtered during the time in the Mastercool rig. This has thus cleaned the orifice tube or expansion valve, which ever the car has. Or perhaps just re-positioned the offending debris, watch here for recurrent symptoms.
In reply to TurnerX19 :
Thanks and, yeah, not a fan of a problem that magically clears up. But so far, after 90 minutes, we still have cold air.
Let's see if it holds.
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