The cooling system
Radiator is not a part of the AC system; it is part of the vehicle's cooling system, which helps to cool the engine by dissipating heat. The AC system consists of the compressor, condenser, and evaporator, which work together to cool and circulate air inside the vehicle.
The radiator is part if the cooling system.
yes...
open the plug (screw) at the bottom of the radiator, open the radiator cap and let the system slowly gravity bleed while pouring more fluid into the radiator. do this with vehicle off.
No. The ac system uses a condenser and an evaporator.
The diagram for this radiator will come in the owners manual when the part is bought. The connection diagram is found in the vehicle that it will be put into.
take the vehicle to a reputible radiator repair shop and they should be able to flush the whole system out for you.
Not sure what the question is getting at, but yes it does. There is no dedicated coolant radiator specifically for the intake, it shares the same coolant system and radiator as every other water-cooled system in the vehicle's engine.
The cooling system on this vehicle does not use a radiator cap on the radiator but on a remote tank. It may have a different (larger) cap on it than what you are used to seeing on the radiator.
Fill Radiator. Start Vehicle Check For Leaks, Find Area Of Leak If Any. Resumbit With More Information. Or Have Radiator Shop Do A Pressure Test On The System .
easiest way to disconnect is to remove airbag fuse from vehicle. why you need to disconnect to remove a radiator is beyond me, the radiator has nothing to do with the airbags
There is a large cooling system leak.