No it does not, it has to do with the cooling system of the engine and the heater. Refrigerant is used in the Air Conditioner.
it can mess with both
No.
If there is a small drip of antifreeze under the car behind the right front tire, this could be from the evaporation hose. Antifreeze may drip after the car has been run with the air conditioning on. If the air conditioning was not on just previous to noticing the antifreeze, it would be a good idea to check all of the hoses for leaks.
PAG oil for the air conditioning system.
You have either a cracked heater core or bad heater hoses that are allowing antifreeze to enter into the vehicle............
On your 1995 Ford Explorer , 4.0L V6 : It depends on if you have air conditioning or not : It came from the factory with a 50 / 50 mix of distilled water and GREEN colored antifreeze ( meeting Ford specification ESE-M97B44-A ) With air conditioning it takes ( 4.3 U.S. quarts of antifreeze in the mix to have a 50 / 50 mix ) Without A/C it takes ( 3.9 quarts ) * Ford states not to exceed 60% antifreeze in the mix
Definition is the brief explanation of anything.
Originally this car had R12 refrigerant. It may have since been updated to accept R134a. The coolant/radiator system is not part of the air conditioning system. But the hot antifreeze-coolant is used for the heating system...
On a 1998 Ford Ranger with the 2.5 liter four cylinder engine : Without air conditioning ( 3.25 U.S. quarts of antifreeze mixed 50 / 50 with 3.25 U.S. quarts of preferably distilled water ) With air conditioning ( 3.6 U.S. quarts of antifreeze mixed 50 / 50 with 3.6 U.S. quarts of preferably distilled water ) ( according to the engine coolant system capacities shown in the owners manual )
drf air conditioning
There are multiple reasons why the air conditioning in your Peugeot 206 SW might be leaking. It might be the normal condensation that occurs with all car air conditioning units, it may be a problem with the car's heater core, or your radiator might be loosing water. Your best bet to find out what is causing the problem is to take your car into a qualified repairman.
Typically an air conditioning or HVAC engineer will the deal with the installation, maintenance and servicing of air conditioning units