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NO! You would never put propane in an air conditioning system! For air conditioning to work it needs FREON. Depending on your car you need to find out what kind of freon it requires, as well.
Probably low on freon, you may have a leak in the system.
yes but you need to how much freon if may not be cost effective. Plus you need to know if it is the same type of freon.
I would say that it depends on the size of the freon leak, could be less, could be more.
The 1939 Packard was the first car with a true air-conditioning system.
all i know is that freon is put into air conditioning units in your car. it's what causes your A/C to be cold
The air comes from the air outside and the air conditioning system in the car turns this into cold or warm air.
When charging your Jaguar X-type air conditioning unit you will need R-135a Freon with oil added in. There are 2 ports on the air conditioning unit, one big and one small. Make sure that the car is running and the air conditioner is on full blast, then hook the Freon refill rig onto the port that it fits to recharge the system.
I do not know of any freon diagrams. I would not recommend trying to charge your air conditioning sytem; it is very complex and the system is under high pressure. Take your car to a professional.
"Freon" is a trademark of DuPont for their CFC and HFC refrigerants. Thus, if you actually have Freon as manufactured by DuPont, then the replacement would be the same type of refrigerant manufactured by any other manufacturer. For example, if you had a car with an R-12 (CFC-12) air conditioning system, then you would only replace it with R-12. Same thing if you have a car with an R-134a (HFC-134) system - you can only replace it with R-134a. Never mix refrigerants and never use a refrigerant other than the type specified for your system.
HVAC in a car is the Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning system.
Part of Air conditioning system