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Are you prepared (yet) for changes in A/C service?

April 13, 2015
Whether you're just taking on air conditioning service, or have been working on these vehicle systems for awhile, it's important to stay up-to-date on tool and regulation changes in the aftermarket.

Every year about this time, you hear about air conditioning service in the shop. Now that the "new" R-1234yf refrigerant has been circling around the fringe of aftermarket shops for the last couple years, it's certainly making headway into tooling and equipment -- but that doesn't mean you still won't be working on older systems that use R-134a. That's why it's important to be prepared for both.

In this month's Tool Briefing article, contributing writer Barry Hoyland focuses on an inoperative A/C system in a 2010 Dodge Caravan. While this article covers the diagnosis and repair of the vehicle's air conditioning, it's important to note the type of refrigerant used in this Dodge: R-134a. (To read this article, visit VehicleServicePros.com/12057029)

While Hoyland covers a number of tools when servicing this R-134a-equipped vehicle, including an RRR machine and electronic leak detector, did you know that there are different standards for tooling up for the new refrigerant?

During the VISION Hi-Tech Training & Expo this past March in Kansas City, Mo., I had the opportunity to sit in on a course covering changes in HVAC vehicle systems. While this course also delved into extensive parts and component changes for late-model vehicles, the class also covered many tool and equipment updates being made to the market. These include updated SAE standards for equipment used to service R-1234yf refrigerant, as well as products OE and aftermarket shops should consider if they plan on servicing these types of vehicles.

Recently, I also had the opportunity to talk with a number of air conditioning tool and equipment manufacturers on the recent changes in A/C service. To be sure, vehicles using R-1234yf refrigerant will be showing up at your shop soon, if they haven't already. Like many changes in mechanical aspects of a vehicle, it takes the aftermarket a few years to see the trickle-down effect of these changes. 

If you do plan on servicing hybrid vehicles, that's another aspect to consider for tools. Did you know that, while traditional belt-driven compressors use PAG oil in the A/C system, high-voltage systems require the use of POE oil? Because POE oil doesn’t attract moisture, it won’t conduct electricity. As a result, there are different RRR machines used to service each (or a hybrid unit that can service vehicles with both types of oil).

If you're seriously considering taking on air conditioning service, or you'd just like a refresher on new tools and equipment on the market, check out my full article, A primer on air conditioning: what to know about changes in refrigerant and tooling. To read online, head to VehicleServicePros.com/12056587.

About the Author

Erica Schueller | Media Relations Manager | Navistar

Erica Schueller is the Media Relations Manager for Navistar.

Before joining Navistar, Schueller served as Editorial Director of the Endeavor Commercial Vehicle Group. The commercial vehicle group includes the following brands: American Trucker, Bulk Transporter, Fleet Maintenance, FleetOwner, Refrigerated Transporter, and Trailer/Body Builders brands.

An award-winning journalist, Schueller has reported and written about the vehicle maintenance and repair industry her entire career. She has received accolades for her reporting and editing in the commercial and automotive vehicle fields by the Truck Writers of North America (TWNA), the International Automotive Media Competition (IAMC), the Folio: Eddie & Ozzie Awards and the American Society of Business Publication Editors (ASBPE) Azbee Awards.

Schueller has received recognition among her publishing industry peers as a recipient of the 2014 Folio Top Women in Media Rising Stars award, acknowledging her accomplishments of digital content management and assistance with improving the print and digital products in the Vehicle Repair Group. She was also named one Women in Trucking’s 2018 Top Women in Transportation to Watch.

She is an active member of a number of industry groups, including the American Trucking Associations' (ATA) Technology & Maintenance Council (TMC),  the Auto Care Association's Young Auto Care Networking Group, GenNext, and Women in Trucking.

In December 2018, Schueller graduated at the top of her class from the Waukesha County Technical College's 10-week professional truck driving program, earning her Class A commercial driver's license (CDL).  

She has worked in the vehicle repair and maintenance industry since 2008.

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