Aircon malfunction, no cold air, no DTC.

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Rfmotors1
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Aircon malfunction, no cold air, no DTC.

Post by Rfmotors1 »

There are many reasons why the aircon may fail but only one way to rectify any of them, it is logical approach based on evidence obtained by tools and observation.

In this case we have a simple complaint: “No cold air from aircon vents”.
The condition can be replicated so this is not intermittent problem, diagnostic tester shows no DTC and temperature sensor on evaporator shows value close to ambient temperature via the live data reading by diagnostic tester. There is also refrigerant pressure 7 bar at stationary and 23 bar when AC on Low temp and engine idle. The pressure goes very high which means the AC compressor does its job, simple visual check revealed the radiator fan is not running and we know there is not stored any DTC in AC or Engine ECU.
We have narrowed the diagnostic to “Radiator fan does not work”

Now it starts to be interesting, we have the simplified diagram which shows 4 wires connector (The pin 3&4 are thick wires as main power supply, pin 2&4 are thin wires).
Radiator fan socket.jpg
Let me draw one scenario that I see in most workshops:
The technician unplugs the radiator fan connector and measures the power supply on the pins 3 and 4 where he reads the battery voltage and marks it OK as this is clearly good based on this wiring diagram.
Then he measures the continuity of all 4 wires and the result is also OK, continuity is good.
What is the conclusion?
Replace the radiator fan unit and then test if it works right? But the new fan is still not working, we have a big problem now. Such situation would lead to re-testing all the wires again and probably decide to replace Engine ECU, because there is nothing else.
So, after new Engine ECU is installed, the radiator fan is still not working!!!
Dead end, parts installed and many labour hours spent without any result, not talking about the vehicle down time.

How could be this avoided?
The answer is in technician basic knowledge plus using correct tools and applying the diagnostic strategy, the event driven diagnostic process. In this case it is diagnostic training and oscilloscope. The time to diagnose this car was 5 min plus one hour where was searching the wire diagram, unpack and connect the scope and removing air filter box as it was not done in work bay with available tools.

Scope connection:
First step was to see what is happening on the 4 wires of radiator fan socket, simple back pin all 4 wires and connect 4 leads to scope plus one common ground to battery negative. Very important is to keep the fan socket plugged in and try not to move with wires avoiding the “accidental fix”.
Set the scope to 20V on all channels and let’s say 1sec time base and click run, then start the engine and set the AC ON, temperature to Low and let’s have a look on the scope screen.

That’s it:
This simple test has proven the fan unit and the engine ECU are OK, the only problem is the ground “high” under the load. (See the blue waveform channel “A”)

On the scope screen:
The channel A is the ground pin number 1 on the fan socket. (See the next pictures)
The ground wire pin 1 was constantly high, voltage was around 8V and when the technician played the ground point by hand, the voltage was dropping low or rising depending on the intermittent connection caused by the cable movement.
Bad Ground with pictures.jpg
The Fix:
The Ground point G14 had to be cleaned from paint, the technician also cleaned all the ground points in this area to avoid possible repeat repair in case more ground points would have bad connection.
(the picture below explains the details, ground point is fixed)
Most of the labour time got to remove the air filter box to reach the ground point G14 and clean the ground points by removing the paint with sandpaper.
Ground point fixed with picture.jpg
Summary:
This was simple case study, the focus was on describing the correct diagnostic strategy and possible misleading if its not followed. The importance of understanding the voltage drop and its relation with electric current.
The diagnostic tester can only display DTC and values which the ECU can read and analyse. The technician must use oscilloscope to see and understand the real data and values in combination with theoretical knowledge and proper practical training. In this case it was Picoscope very basic kit that has done the job but basically any scope will do good on such simple circuit.

I hope it was interesting case and thank you for reading.
Roman
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Steve Smith
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Re: Aircon malfunction, no cold air, no DTC.

Post by Steve Smith »

Hello Roman, thank you so much for posting and sharing this study

Rest assured you are helping and inspiring others at the same time

I know only too well how long it takes to put these studies together with images and annotations too

It is very much appreciated


Take care.....Steve

jueja
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Re: Aircon malfunction, no cold air, no DTC.

Post by jueja »

Thank you Roman for this case study.

Because you're talking about paint removal: Was this problem self-inflicted after some kind of bodywork?

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Rfmotors1
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Re: Aircon malfunction, no cold air, no DTC.

Post by Rfmotors1 »

Hello Jueja,
Interesting question, I didn't explain it originally but it was a surprising discovery.
The ground point design is by welded nut over hole in the car body, the nut and area around is completely painted except the internal nut thread which makes the ground connection as the bolt will be installed.
I think it's good design but the welded nut was missing on this ground point and somebody installed ordinary nut there while complete area was perfectly painted.
The only possible fix was to remove paint and create the old fashion connection. We have done the some on the surrounding ground points, after close inspection, there were welded nuts but the thread had some reminding paint inside. I think there was done some minor repair but the car history is unknown.
Roman.

jueja
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Re: Aircon malfunction, no cold air, no DTC.

Post by jueja »

Thank you for the explanation.

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