Re: '95 Civic--intermittent A/C cooling problem"Steven L." <sdlitvin@earthlink,net > wrote
> Elle wrote:
>
>> I would cut the techs a little slack. Sometimes trial and
>> error (a.k.a. "fishing expeditions") may often be the
>> cheaper route to take. Much of good diagnosis necessarily
>> is trial and error, albeit systematic, as the OP says.
>
> What I was asking, is whether there's some kind of
> checklist of all the relays, switches, etc., that need to
> be checked systematically.
Sure. I agree a systematic approach is the right approach.
Autozone's free online repair guide for the 95 Civic breaks
the system down into something I think is manageable,
especially with tests one can do on electrical parts. I
think the factory service manual I cited earlier is better,
though. Try both. For the autozone guide, see
http :// www .autozone,com /shopping/repairGuide.htm?pageId=0900c152800619e5 .
If you poke around per the troubleshooting routine in the FS
manual or the autozone guide, you might find simply that
some of the electrical connections are corroded, loose, etc.
With a car this old, it's to be expected, and this group
gets a lot of reports of same: A loose wire.
> I had heard there is more than one relay involved.
Certainly a few electrical switches etc. deserve an
examination, per the above.
> Barring that, it really does degenerate into a fishing
> expedition.
>> Would maybe an order to, say, replace the whole A/C
>> system be cheaper?
>
> The other poster has it right, I think: It's time to take
> it to an actual Honda dealer and let them struggle with
> it. I've already had the compressor and the clutch relay
> replaced, so I'm sort of halfway toward replacing the A/C
> system already. :-)
I agree a Honda dealer might be able to nail this quickly
and so about as cost efficiently as possible, considering
the time it would take to either do it by one's self or find
a mechanic with A/C experience.
But, ya know, if you're into this kind of stuff and can
operate a multimeter, I'd give the online repair guides a
chance.
Also, I'd really want to double check that the basics (and
known problems for older systems) were covered properly,
like the check for enough refrigerant in the system. Not to
presume. Just going from afar on what we know.
>> Then we have to consider that a 95 Civic LX (auto tranny
>> with 80k miles) is currently worth around $2500,
>> according to Edmunds used car appraiser.
>
> BTW, that's quite amazing.
>
> I can remember when if you owned a 12 year old Chevy or
> Buick, you had to pay a junk dealer $50 just to haul it
> away. The depreciation on gas-powered Hondas is
> surprisingly slow.
Yes, it's pretty well established that Hondas (and a few
other imports) do not depreciate nearly as quickly as other
cars.
BTW, that estimate I provided is for private party exchange
(not the retail used price nor trade in value), and
obviously I made some assumptions about current condition of
the car, auto or manual tranny, etc. So your car could go
for more or less. It's a ballpark. kbb,com does an estimate
of used cars also.
Not that you should sell your Civic. I am driving a 1991 and
can't give it up because it runs so well and is easy to fix.
Looking a little rough around the edges, but especially with
gasoline prices headed up, I don't see the point in getting
a new car.
Updates would be welcome. It's just about that time of year
when folks's A/C systems are giving up the ghost right and
left.