BASIC PRIMER ON THE WAY AIR CONDTIIONING AND REFRIGERATION WORK: All mechanical refrigeration works the same way. You remove heat from the cooled space by boiling a liquid in the evaporator at a low temperature, then you compress that liquid so that the temperature that it returns to a liquid is above ambient, and you do that in the condenser. You put that condensed liquid into a reciever, until the evaporator calls for more refrigerant, where there is some device like a thermal expansion valve, or a capillary tube that meters the high pressure liquid into the evaporator and lets it become a low pressure liquid, until it boils. This process takes advantage of the fact that by changing the pressure on a gas that will condense to a liquid, you take advantage of the latent heat of condensation/vaporization movement. For instance, water at 34 degrees can be a vapor, if there is a high enough vacuum. It takes 978 BTUs to change a LB of water to a LB of steam, no matter what the temperature. So it you have water at a 28 Inch vacuum it will boil, removing that 978 BTUs from the air that is at a temperature above 34 degrees. At atmospheric pressure, water at any temperature below 212 will condense to a liquid, after it dumps that 978 BTUs per LB. So you can see how you can remove heat from a space at 70 degrees and transfer it to a space that is 100 degrees. There are 4 main parts to the air conditioning system. The compressor, Located on your engine, which sucks the hot low pressure gas out of the evaporator, compresses it to a hot high presure gas, and sends it to the condenser, located in front of your radiator. There the hot high pressure gas becomes a relatively cool high pressure liquid. It then flows to the reciever, which is usually located on the end of the condenser, and is stored there, until the Thermal expansion valve opens and lets some into the evaporator, both of which are located on the cowl, unless yours is mounted in the trunk, where it boils and changes from a cold low pressure liquid to a hot low pressure gas. John ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm