The refrigerant is for the entire air conditioner system not just for the condenser units.
First, this question is not specific! There is whole bunch air conditioner condenser.
Each manufacture design different condenser capacity.
I might come back to this question.
An Air Conditioner needs the Type of "Refrigerant" that is stated on the (Identi-Plate) usually located near the condenser.
I have never heard of any wiring to a condenser on any car. The condenser carries the refrigerant in an air conditioner system.
No. An air conditioner operates with a condenser which circulates the air past refrigerant-filled coils, which thereby allows it blow out cold air. They have no ability to heat.
Begin by removing the air conditioning condenser belt. Remove the air conditioner hoses. Remove the air conditioner condenser retaining bolts. Reverse the process to install your new air conditioner condenser.
Your recharge your air conditioner with the type of refrigerant which it was designed for.
Any refrigeration system (home air conditioner, refrigerator, automotive air conditioner...) uses the evaporation cycle of the refrigerant to remove heat from an object.The evaporation cycle of refrigeration systems is as follows:Refrigerant is compressed by the compressor. When the refrigerant is compressed the heat is forced into a smaller volume, raising the temperature of the refrigerant.The hotter refrigerant is then passed through a cooling coil, also called a condenser and air is passed across the hot coils, cooling the compressed refrigerant to room temperature, or close. The refrigerant, now under much higher pressure then changes state from a gas to a liquid.The refrigerant is then allowed to pass through an orifice, allowing the compressed refrigerant to expand. When the refrigerant expands it changes back to a gas, the temperature drops. The process is called "heat of vaporization".The chilled refrigerant is then passed through an expansion coil where something (air, water... whatever is being refrigerated) gets cooler.From there, the refrigerant is again compressed, starting the cycle over.As you can see, the condenser is essential to the refrigeration process. If the condenser develops a leak, the refrigerant is lost. If the condenser is kinked, refrigerant cannot get past. If air is blocked from passing over the condenser, the refrigerant cannot be cooled.
Any refrigeration system (home air conditioner, refrigerator, automotive air conditioner...) uses the evaporation cycle of the refrigerant to remove heat from an object.The evaporation cycle of refrigeration systems is as follows:Refrigerant is compressed by the compressor. When the refrigerant is compressed the heat is forced into a smaller volume, raising the temperature of the refrigerant.The hotter refrigerant is then passed through a cooling coil, also called a condenser and air is passed across the hot coils, cooling the compressed refrigerant to room temperature, or close. The refrigerant, now under much higher pressure then changes state from a gas to a liquid.The refrigerant is then allowed to pass through an orifice, allowing the compressed refrigerant to expand. When the refrigerant expands it changes back to a gas, the temperature drops. The process is called "heat of vaporization".The chilled refrigerant is then passed through an expansion coil where something (air, water... whatever is being refrigerated) gets cooler.From there, the refrigerant is again compressed, starting the cycle over.As you can see, the condenser is essential to the refrigeration process. If the condenser develops a leak, the refrigerant is lost. If the condenser is kinked, refrigerant cannot get past. If air is blocked from passing over the condenser, the refrigerant cannot be cooled.
sorry i dont have a clue
0.55 kg (1.21 lb)........
The air conditioner condenser is located in front of the radiator behind the front grill.........
The inside of the air conditioner condenser can be cleaned by removing the hoses and running water through the condenser. Run water through the condenser until the water exiting the condenser is clear.
An RV air conditioner works much like an air conditioner in any vehicle. It has a compressor and a condenser that operate in concert to cool the air. In an RV, the air conditioner runs off of a generator when the engine is off.