Hello,
I purchased a 2020 Chevy Equinox Variable Displacement AC compressor to tear down. I understand the basics of how it works, however, when I turn the hub, I can hear what sounds like suction sounds, but when I put my finger over the suction and discharge ports there is no suction or pressure. I believe when an ECVD compressor is off that the control solenoid has the high side port open to the crankcase to keep the compressor at minimum displacement because pressure is equal on both sides of the piston, but it has to pump something in order to create some suction pressure when the solenoid is energized, opening the suction port decreasing the pressure in the crankcase which will cause the pistons to displace to maximum displacement and it regulates displacement as needed. Am I correct about this? I have read somewhere when the solenoid is not energized it creates a bypass between suction and discharge on some compressors and most of the refrigerant recirculates instead of going into the circuit. Maybe both are correct? When the compressor is turned by hand when the solenoid is not energized, is the refrigerant recirculating because there is a bleed hole that is always open to the suction side and the flow is taking the path of least resistance, and when the compressor is actually connected to the engine running very fast it will start to build pressure as the bleed hole cannot bleed the volume the compressor is pumping at high speeds?
I'd appreciate any insight on this!
Thank you,
-Mike
I purchased a 2020 Chevy Equinox Variable Displacement AC compressor to tear down. I understand the basics of how it works, however, when I turn the hub, I can hear what sounds like suction sounds, but when I put my finger over the suction and discharge ports there is no suction or pressure. I believe when an ECVD compressor is off that the control solenoid has the high side port open to the crankcase to keep the compressor at minimum displacement because pressure is equal on both sides of the piston, but it has to pump something in order to create some suction pressure when the solenoid is energized, opening the suction port decreasing the pressure in the crankcase which will cause the pistons to displace to maximum displacement and it regulates displacement as needed. Am I correct about this? I have read somewhere when the solenoid is not energized it creates a bypass between suction and discharge on some compressors and most of the refrigerant recirculates instead of going into the circuit. Maybe both are correct? When the compressor is turned by hand when the solenoid is not energized, is the refrigerant recirculating because there is a bleed hole that is always open to the suction side and the flow is taking the path of least resistance, and when the compressor is actually connected to the engine running very fast it will start to build pressure as the bleed hole cannot bleed the volume the compressor is pumping at high speeds?
I'd appreciate any insight on this!
Thank you,
-Mike
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