- Sep 5, 2000
- 13,897
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Car AC isn't something I normally mess around with so I figured I'd ask around before diving into this. The AC on my 97 Chevy venture went out a few days ago. It appears that the AC clutch isn't engaging. (push AC button inside the car, compressor never spins up).
I pulled the connector from the AC clutch and checked the voltage across the two lines going in (one black, one green, double checked to make sure green is ground by checking continuity with the frame) while the AC was switched on, I'm only getting 0.5 volts at the clutch. That makes me think I've got a bad fuse or relay somewhere upstream of the AC clutch that's preventing me from getting power to the clutch.
Before I dove in and replaced all the fuses and relays having to do with the AC clutch I wanted to make sure that this was the likely culprit. Does anyone know if there is any other reason why I'd only be getting 0.5 volts at the AC clutch?
It would be really nice if I could fix this with a fuse or relay, I'm hoping that's not just wishful thinking.
I pulled the connector from the AC clutch and checked the voltage across the two lines going in (one black, one green, double checked to make sure green is ground by checking continuity with the frame) while the AC was switched on, I'm only getting 0.5 volts at the clutch. That makes me think I've got a bad fuse or relay somewhere upstream of the AC clutch that's preventing me from getting power to the clutch.
Before I dove in and replaced all the fuses and relays having to do with the AC clutch I wanted to make sure that this was the likely culprit. Does anyone know if there is any other reason why I'd only be getting 0.5 volts at the AC clutch?
It would be really nice if I could fix this with a fuse or relay, I'm hoping that's not just wishful thinking.