No. Coolant only runs through your radiator into the engine and back again. Your condencer is part of your A/C system.
We need to know what the coolant won't run through.
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.
no
More than likely water from the A/C condenser drain. If it tastes sweet it is coolant, otherwise it is water from the A/C condenser drain. That is perfectly normal. The A/C compressor will run anytime the A/C or defroster is on.
A condenser is a form of heat exchanger. In the condenser, the coolant condenses from a gas to a liquid, and loses heat energy to the surroundings (like air being blown across it).
A Liebig condenser is commonly used in laboratory settings to condense vapors to liquids. It consists of a straight inner tube surrounded by a larger outer tube through which coolant flows. The vapor passes through the inner tube and is cooled by the surrounding coolant, causing it to condense back into liquid form.
So that the maximum cooling of the distillate is effected. By sending the cold coolant (usually water) in at the coolest part of the condenser it also reduces thermal shock.
Thermal energy is removed from the inside of a fridge by the coolant circulating through the system. The coolant absorbs heat as it evaporates in the evaporator coils inside the fridge, cooling the air inside. The heat absorbed by the coolant is then released outside the fridge through the condenser coils, completing the refrigeration cycle.
It's transferred to the air which passes through the condenser fins.
Vapor compression in the refrigeration cycle is the process which turns heated vapor into a cold liquid. This allows the coolant to flow through the condenser and cool the air.
Air flow through radiator restricted with debris. Coolant flow through inside of radiator restricted with debris. Low on coolant. Faulty thermostat. Coolant fans inop.
Without an AC condenser, yes. I advise disconnecting the AC compressor so it won't run dry on lubricant.