air conditioning question

HVAC, heating, cooling, air handling. Anything air temp related.
Post Reply

Topic author
huntnfreak
I am merely driving my van
I am merely driving my van
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon Sep 06, 2010 6:09 pm
Location: Pontypool, Ontario, Canada

air conditioning question

Post by huntnfreak »

I was wondering if anybody knew at what temperature the air conditioning compressor stopped kicking in at? Freezing point or lower or higher? Hate running it at the moderate temperatures using heat to defrost and the compressor running. I'm sure there is a reason for that but in the name of fuel consumption, I try to be as frugal as possible. Anybody ever use a switch in line to manually shut it off to turn it off during fall times or is this a bad idea?

astroturf
ASV Supporter
ASV Supporter
Posts: 1658
Joined: Wed Sep 09, 2009 6:25 pm

Re: air conditioning question

Post by astroturf »

HuntnFreak,
Without running the AC during certain functions, you will lose the ability to remove moisture from the defrosting air.
I suppose that you could wire an open into the low pressure switch, and that would keep the ac compressor from coming on.
It will be just like a car that didn't have ac, or has had the ac system removed.
Good Luck, and Keep us Posted, Jim

kc5gxl
I get chills without my van.
Posts: 59
Joined: Mon May 21, 2007 6:40 pm
Location: Orange Texas

Re: air conditioning question

Post by kc5gxl »

huntnfreak wrote:I was wondering if anybody knew at what temperature the air conditioning compressor stopped kicking in at? Freezing point or lower or higher? Hate running it at the moderate temperatures using heat to defrost and the compressor running. I'm sure there is a reason for that but in the name of fuel consumption, I try to be as frugal as possible. Anybody ever use a switch in line to manually shut it off to turn it off during fall times or is this a bad idea?
Hello hunt;

The compressor comes on anytime you put the selector switch in defrost. That is to help keep the windshield clear. As was said, just put a on/off switch in the low pressure switch circuit. The low pressure switch is on the accumulator. For that matter, you could just unplug the switch. :supz: That would keep the compressor from coming on. There will be no harm done to the AC system if you do that.

Drive safe,

Dan Harriman
91 Safari Shorty RIP
Orange Texas
If at first you don't succeed, maybe you shouldn't try sky diving!

LiftedAWDAstro
I have my van tatooed on my cheeks
Posts: 4379
Joined: Sat Sep 09, 2006 3:35 pm
Location: New Haven, NY

Re: air conditioning question

Post by LiftedAWDAstro »

The only thing I would be concerned with is not cycling the compressor to keep it and the internal seals lubricated. For what a blown compressor costs, you will never save that much gas over a winter. The windshield will not defrost as fast, especially in really wet fall/spring weather. I would leave it as is.
Current rides:
2013 Toyota Tundra DC 4x4
2008 Dodge Nitro 4x4
2005 Nissan Sentra 1.8S Special Edition

Mileage spreadsheet

Vans owned:
1986 Safari 2.5L 4 speed manual - scrapped
1995 Astro 2WD conversion 4.11 posi, shift kit, DHC rock rails - sold to Skippy
1998 Astro 4x4 D44, D60, NP231, full hydraulic system with 9k# Milemarker winch and snow plow - sold to Lockdoc
2003 Astro AWD all stock - traded for a 3/4 ton truck
2005 AWD, 4.10's - sold to skippy
User avatar

MountainManJoe
I have my van tatooed on my cheeks
Posts: 3146
Joined: Fri Aug 08, 2008 12:55 pm
Location: The Pacific North Wet
Has thanked: 48 times
Been thanked: 25 times

Re: air conditioning question

Post by MountainManJoe »

I'm pretty sure the owner's manual says that even if you don't need A/C, you should run it once in a while for maintenance.
Post Reply