Blog – Recharge Pro Services · Car A/C Tips & Full Service Guide
hosted by inc cloud

RECHARGE PRO BLOG

Car A/C tips, guides, and real-world troubleshooting

Learn how car A/C recharge really works, when DIY makes sense, and when to call a mobile technician. All written from the perspective of people who actually work with R-134a & R-1234yf every day.

🔍

Showing 3 articles

Today’s A/C Comfort Snapshot

Orlando & Kissimmee, FL

Live weather
Current ambient temperature –°F
Today’s expected high –°F
Typical healthy A/C vent temp* ≈ 38–45°F

*A well-performing A/C system usually cools the center vents into the upper 30s–low 40s °F range.

Latest A/C Articles

Turn what you learned into cold air at your driveway.

Already know your system needs more than a DIY top-off? Book a mobile visit and get your A/C recovered, vacuumed, leak-checked, and recharged to spec—without leaving home.

Serving Orlando & Kissimmee · R-134a and R-1234yf · EPA 609 certified.

FULL WALKTHROUGH

Full Car A/C Service Instructions (R-134a & R-1234yf)

This guide explains the professional flow for recovering refrigerant, pulling a deep vacuum, performing a UV dye leak check, and recharging by weight. It also includes interactive pressure charts so you can sanity-check gauge readings for both R-134a and R-1234yf.

For educational purposes. If you service A/C systems for payment, EPA Section 609 requires certification and approved equipment, and prohibits venting refrigerant.

Service Flow

Recover → Vacuum → Dye → Recharge

Pro style
  • • No venting – always recover into a cylinder.
  • • Charge by weight, not just “good pressures.”
  • • Use UV dye as a leak locator, not a permanent fix.
  • • Match oil type & quantity to the service label.

This guide pairs written steps with interactive pressure charts so you can cross-check what the gauges are telling you.

Safety & Legal Basics (Read this first)

  • No venting: U.S. federal law prohibits intentionally releasing automotive refrigerant into the atmosphere. Always recover into approved cylinders.
  • Certification for paid work: If you service motor-vehicle A/C systems for any form of consideration, you must be Section 609-certified and use approved recovery/recycling equipment.
  • Reusing refrigerant: Recovered refrigerant should be properly recycled or reclaimed before reuse, even if it goes back into the same vehicle.
  • Fire & toxicity: R-1234yf is mildly flammable (A2L). Keep away from open flames, use good ventilation, and follow OEM and SAE safety instructions.
  • Personal protection: Wear safety glasses, gloves, and avoid skin contact with liquid refrigerant and oil. Frostbite burns happen fast.

Tools & Supplies Checklist

Core A/C tools

  • • EPA-approved recovery machine (rated for the refrigerant you’re working with).
  • • Dedicated recovery cylinder(s) for R-134a / R-1234yf (never mix types).
  • • Manifold gauge set or digital gauges, with correct quick couplers.
  • • Deep vacuum pump (targeting ≤ 500 microns for most work).
  • • Micron gauge to actually measure vacuum level.
  • • Scale for charging by weight (0.1 oz or 5 g resolution if possible).

Leak / service extras

  • • UV dye compatible with the refrigerant and oil type.
  • • UV lamp and glasses for leak inspection.
  • • Electronic leak detector (very helpful).
  • • New service port caps with good O-rings.
  • • Nitrogen tank + regulator & hose for advanced leak checks.
  • • OEM-specified refrigerant & oil (check label/service info).

Step-by-Step Service Flow

Step 1 – Add UV Dye Early & Quick Leak Check

  • • Before recovery or vacuum: add **a small dose of UV dye** so leaks can be found without wasting refrigerant.
  • • Pressurize the system briefly with a **trace amount of clean shop air + soapy water**, or use an electronic leak detector.
  • • Inspect common leak points: condenser, line crimps, compressor front seal, service ports.
  • • If a **major leak is found now**, repair it before moving on (saves refrigerant, time, and customer money).
  • • After confirming no catastrophic leaks, proceed to full service.

Step 2 – Identify system & confirm complaint

  • • Read the under-hood label: refrigerant type and factory charge (e.g. 18.0 oz).
  • • Note oil type and quantity if listed (e.g. PAG46 135 ml).
  • • Confirm symptoms: warm at idle, only cool while driving, no blower air, compressor not engaging, etc.
  • • Inspect visible components: condenser fins, lines, obvious oily leaks, damaged fittings.

Step 3 – Baseline checks (electrical & airflow)

  • • Verify cabin blower works on all speeds.
  • • With A/C ON: check that condenser/radiator fans run as expected.
  • • Listen for compressor clutch engagement click or RPM change.
  • • Scan for A/C-related fault codes if you have a scan tool.

Step 4 – Recover existing refrigerant

  • • Connect recovery machine to high and low side ports with proper couplers.
  • • Recover all refrigerant into the correct cylinder.
  • • Record how much came out (shows if the system was low, overcharged, or near spec).
  • • Allow the machine to run through its full cycle including “oil drain” if equipped.

Step 5 – Add UV dye (full dose) & oil correction

  • • Compare recovered oil to expected amount; adjust using OEM data.
  • • Add full UV dye dose via injector or dye+oil can, following dosage instructions.
  • • Log dye & oil added to avoid cumulative over-oiling.

Step 6 – Deep vacuum & static leak check

  • • Connect vacuum pump and micron gauge (core removal tools help a lot).
  • • Pull down to roughly ≤ 500 microns **(≈ –29.8 inHg, ≈ –14.6 psi)**.
  • • Many techs aim for 300–500 microns **(≈ –29.88 to –29.92 inHg)**.
  • • Isolate the pump and watch the micron gauge 5–10+ minutes.
  • • Small rise that stabilizes = moisture boiling off. Continuous rise = likely a leak.

Step 7 – Recharge by weight

  • • Put refrigerant cylinder on the scale; tare to zero.
  • • With the system in vacuum, start charging into the low side (engine off) until close to the label charge.
  • • If needed, finish per machine/OEM instructions with the system running (never slug the compressor with liquid).
  • • Confirm total charged amount matches the spec within tolerance.

Step 8 – Performance check & pressures

  • • Run 5–10 minutes: A/C MAX, recirc on, blower high, doors open/windows down.
  • • Measure center vent temperature.
  • • Note ambient temperature and compare gauge readings to the interactive chart below as a sanity check.

Step 9 – UV leak inspection & follow-up

  • • After drive time, use UV light to inspect hose crimps, condenser, compressor front seal, evaporator drain, etc.
  • • Fix any leaks found, then repeat vacuum and recharge steps.
  • • Log date, charge amount, dye usage, and findings.

When to stop and investigate before charging

  • • Vacuum won’t pull below ~1500–2000 microns (≈ –27 to –28 inHg) → likely a large leak or open fitting.
  • • Vacuum pulls down but climbs quickly toward atmospheric when isolated → likely a leak.
  • • Compressor makes harsh grinding or squealing noises → diagnose before adding refrigerant.
  • • Fans don’t run or compressor never engages even with a correct charge → electrical/control issue.

Aim for a system that is correctly charged, leak-free, and safe for the compressor long-term—not just “cold for today.”

Interactive Pressure & Temperature Reference

These ranges are based on common charts for automotive systems and are meant as a sanity check only. Always prioritize the vehicle manufacturer’s information and under-hood labels.

Pressure mode

Select whether you’re looking at the system running or static (engine off).

Ambient temperature

80°F

Slide to see typical low & high side ranges around this temperature.

65°F 70°F 75°F 80°F 85°F 90°F 95°F

R-134a

Running pressures (approximate)

Factory label wins
Low side 40–50 psi
High side 175–210 psi

R-1234yf

Running pressures (approximate)

Factory label wins
Low side 43–48 psi
High side 173–205 psi

Running mode: assumes a healthy system with doors open/windows down, A/C on MAX, blower high, and stable RPM.
Static mode: engine off, system equalized for several minutes – both sides should be roughly similar and close to ambient in psi.

Vent temperature check

45°F

Measure at the center dash vent with A/C on MAX and recirculation.

30°F 40°F 50°F 60°F 70°F 80°F
Status: Excellent – very cold

Rough guide: mid/upper 30s–low 40s °F = strong; 45–55 °F = acceptable but worth keeping an eye on; above that = weak or not cooling.

Want this full process done for you, in your driveway?

Recharge Pro Services can recover, vacuum, leak-check with dye, and recharge by weight for both R-134a and R-1234yf, using mobile equipment in the Orlando & Kissimmee area.

EPA 609 certified · No venting · Transparent, up-front pricing.