Condensation from the ac evaporator inside under the dash drains thru a drain tube. The drain tube is probably plugged with crud.
Clean water should be used and mixed with the proper coolant for your car.
the drain hose is plugged
all ac systems drip water if working correctly-----if water is getting on floor of car,the drain tube is plugged
Typically, if your car is leaking water it has to do with the air conditioning system. This simply usually means the condensation is leaking from the AC.
because of condensation
The AC system doesn't use water. Water may be produced at the evaporator as a result of the rapid exchange of heat to the ambient air, but there is no water in an AC system.
normally if a car is leaking water it is because of the air conditioning in the car being cold so the car will sometimes leak if the ac is running long enough and cold enough.
your drain line for your ac evaporator core is plugged up. A service station can blow this out for you.
If your car has air conditioning and if you are %100 percent sure it is straight water then yes, it should be fine. The water you are seeing is just condensation on your AC lines
An AC compressor is part of an air conditioner which may be used in a car's AC system. The compressor is used to change the pressure between the AC's compartments in order to help condense the refrigerant gas back into a liquid.
central AC unit - sometimes after any AC unit shuts off, you might hear the refrigerant gurgling in the lines, that is normal. window AC - older AC units had water draining out of the back end of it, this is the moisture removed from the air in the room. Newer AC units usually do not have any water draining out, the water is splashed on the hot coils in the back end, where it evaporates, which helps get rid of the heat and makes the unit operate more efficiently. it is normal.
No, the pump runs on AC current the battery supplies DC current. Yes, but you will need an inverter to turn the DC current into AC current