Hi Dan, you're probably tired of hearing from me, but I have great news. Last night after I finished charging the system I could only get 60 degrees from vents, so that's when I replied to you. Now, the next day, I started the car and the A/C, and to my surprise 40 degree cold air was flowing from my vents, so my wife and I took a drive and it remained 40 degrees and it's about 90 degrees outside here in Florida. So it was the expansion valve all along. Crazy, but thank God it's working fine now. I ordered a compressor this morning before I started the vehicle, and I just cancelled the order, not needed. Dan, I can't thank you enough, I would never have been able to do this job without you and your videos. God Bless you and your family.
@@boosted6ers My symptoms were blowing hot air out of the vents, and the pressure on the high side was very high, seem to be a blockage. Hope this helps.
@@rbilardo47 Hey quick question I am having that same issue, my ac was blowing like low 60’s during the day in Houston but I can’t get it to blow any colder I replaced the ac compressor same thing could this be an expansion valve?
Dan is the man! I had an ac clutch problem, replaced it with an Amazon kit. Two days later, the electromagnet started smelling like ozone, blew the fuse and quit. Got a replacement kit, didn’t know the fuse was blown, and spent four hours backwards troubleshooting it to find the ac clutch fuse had blown. Kick me, I’m stupid sometimes!
I tried the through the firewall method and it was a no go. Thank you for posting this. It guided me through, especially with locating all the fasteners. Thanks for posting a calm,clean language video. Best wishes.
@ 21:30 Evaporator was extracted. I think if the words "Evaporator Replacement" would be included in the title of the film, it would get way more viewers, since there are very few films on the subject. The project is generally considered to be complex and many interested in it would love to see this film. I personally pull it since wanted to see, out of curiosity where the Expansion Valve is located on Honda, but then to my surprise I saw and Evaporator to be extracted. Very glad I did it, I also plan to update everything in one of our cars (2001 Saturn SL2). @ 26:58 In the Shop Manual for one of our cars it says to put R-12 (mineral) Oil on the o-rings, when you install a Condenser (on corresponding hoses, which go into the Condenser). And they add: don't put PAG Oil (which is in the AC system there, runs on R-134a refrigerant), bcs of possible corrosion issues in the future. Though when I did research about the install many advised w/PAG Oil on those o-rings. I'm not sure if any oil should go on the o-rings in Expansion Valve. Thank you very much for such informative film.
The quality of your videos is awesome! so many different view points help a lot! Keep it up! You have helped me so much with my civic, just yesterday i was able to fix the AC by my self!
Thanks so much, I often wonder if the time I put into these videos is worth it, (CZcams money is minimal) but it’s comments like this which keep me going, helping others in these hard time is very satisfying, thanks so much for the kindness, I appreciate you👍🏼
Great Video!!! I just used the instruction to replace the expansion valve in a 2012 Accord. Now have ice cold AC again!!! Feel like i should you to the christmas list!!!
This worked for a 2016 Honda CRV EX AWD. I pulled the center console, radio and climate control panel. I also removed some dash screws on the passenger side including the glove box support bar and I was able to sneak the blower motor assembly under the dash while bending up the dash. So I did not need to cut the lower dash section. Thank you for your demonstration.
It’s Possible to Change the expansion valve from the engine compartment. You have to slightly bend the hole to allow it to slide out. Then bend it back afterwards. Better then cutting the dash in my opinion
Dang, the patience required to do those hidden bolts/nuts/screws--drives me nuts on this car...I spent an hour the other day pushing on a crowbar with one hand, holding a bolt in another hand, and a socket wrench (in another hand? angels helping?) just getting the one deep bolt back in under the passenger headlight assembly for a simple bulb change (after of course climbing under car and taking off bumper...and before climbing back under car to put bumper back on...crazy!)...what you did getting down in back of engine and not dropping bolts and then flat against floor into deep hidden hole for bolts, only to have to go even more ninja to grab that last hidden screw...if I'm patient I think I can take it apart, but back together again? don't know if I have it in me -- certainly I'm going to need new tools to even try (isn't that really why we DIY? to tell wife it's cheaper to buy all the tools than to pay mechanic?)...is there such a thing as magnetic flexy sockets?
I can't believe that they made the hole on a firewall just big enough so that you could see it and almost get it out but it's small enough so that you have to take the whole dashboard apart
Hello, good video, I've been in the United States for a year, I bought a honda civic lx and the first thing I dared to do without knowing was to change the transmission oil filter and it was thanks to you. I would like to know how to recharge the ac it's not there cooling a lot, thank you very much god bless you
ALWAYS A GOOD HACK THERE WAS ANOTHER WAY TO DO IT WHICH WAS TO REMOVE THE COMPLETE DASH ASSEMBLY BUT WHY WHEN U HEVE THAT VERY FAST AND HELPFUL TIP LBVS BUT GOOD WORK NICE VIDEO 😎
Thanks a lot for all your information! Great videos. My issue is, the clutch spins intermittently as it should, when engaged blows ice cold, however, when it stops spinning it only blows warm air. I’ve Replaced the relay, checked fuse, check freon and all where good. Where would i go next?
A very good video, thanks! Would you consider doing videos on headliner fabric replacing, catalytic converter and exhaust system replacing, clock reset on a 2006-2011 EXL since it won't update via satellite, Charcoal Canister Evap Vent Purge Solenoid P0497 Repair. A few problems that need to be fixed. Thanks!
Good evening Danny, hope you are well. Thank you for your exceptional information on car repairs. I was going to make an attempt at this job, found where you purchased the valve, but I was hoping you would be able to provide a link for the o-rings and for the compressor oil to lubricate the o-rings. Thank you for your time in this matter.
@dannysdiygarage so I'm getting 30-33 degrees difference now after compressor replacement and fresh oil. It seems like my expansion valve was sticking but now the oil has helped. Would replacing the valve help get me to 40 degrees or likely thats the best it will get?
@@vinceparker2888 yes, the meatering valve/expansion valve is responsible for this and will have a huge impact on getting your vehicle to the best temperature possible, as well as correct freon in the system, air flow, and a number of other things
Maybe there were others who made this same comment and their comments were deleted somehow. I was surprised that you didn't mention evacuating the system of freon as the first step (either with your own system or taking it to a shop to reclaim). Then, I discovered later in the video that you obviously hadn't done that step and just let the system depressurize into the air. While modern R134a freon is not as destructive to the atmosphere as R12 was, there are still laws on the books that make this practice illegal. This video is encouraging people to unknowingly break the environmental law in the US. Maybe put some disclaimer to tell folks to start out evacuating the system of freon first?
That’s a great point, hopefully people do the right thing, some shops will actually do this for free, others will charge up to $100, I know this because I researched it and was surprised of the cost, I believe this was mentioned in one of the other AC videos I did, once again Great point 👍🏼
Thanks for sharing. Is this the only way to replace the valve. I saw a video for a accord and they did it by disconnecting the lines in the hood then pulling it out.
Yes this is the correct and only way to do this, follow the video steps, it’s not very hard and it goes quick once you know where the hidden screw are, I showed exactly where they are in the disassembly.
Hi Danny. Im a huge fan of yours and your videos are amazing! Im not familiar with autozone but you can rent tools and when you return it they give you back the money is that right?
That is correct, many auto parts stores do this because they hope you’ll purchase the parts to fix your car at their store, I suggest buying parts from that store if you’re using this service, it’s the right thing to do 👍🏼
Does configuration of the AC system apply to 10th generation civics as well? The evap expansion valve in my fiances 10th gen civic as well as the condenser need replaced. The stealership quoted us $4,100 to replace the parts along with a front cv axle. This all seems too easy to be that costly.
i got this code on my hrv 2020 EVAP system incorrect purge flow P0441 Evap system low pressure purge line performance permanent cant clear it codes P0441 AND P04F1 any help?
Oh boy that looks like a back breaking job. I remember replacing a blend door actuator and that was tiring. I believe the evaporator is bad. How do you know it just the expansion valve and not the entire evaporator? Test for leaks? Thanks for your help I’ve watched all 3 AC videos.
Nice work! Clean job. Seems pretty extensive but very doable. Was this the actual issue? My 2011 civic Is currently having ac blowing cold then blowing warm, but thinking its ac compressor issue/ clutch.
Such an amazing video. Loved watching it. I have a hissing noise coming from my passenger side AC vents and it’s intermittent and only when I hit the gas pedals and car is in motion. Could this be an expansion valve issue or just low on gas. It’s a brand new car and dealer says this is normal but it’s annoying.
It wasn’t blowing cold , also when I checked my pressure with the gauges the pressures were not making sense, I also added R 134a and it made no difference Thanks Scott for the support 👍🏼
As others have mentioned, its possible to pull out the expansion valve from the firewall side and avoid this whole disassembly. It requires some 90deg needle nose pliers and picks. You may have to very gently shave part of the opening with a dremel. Keep everything clea. Still, FAR easier than this method.
whatever way works, this was not a difficult job and this is how all the manuals and Pro-Demand tell you to do it, if you have a short cut that works and isn't a hack, I would love to learn it. Please send me a link to the video of this being done on a Honda Civic, appreciate the feedback
Most Honda's you have to go in from the cabin unlike other manufacturers where you can swap out the TXV from the engine compartment. I would have used some PAG oil on the O-rings when inserting back into the evaporator.
Nice video, can you please tell me how much oil should i add after changing the evaporator? Knowing that it was leaking all of the refrigerant. And I noticed some oil came out. And I don't know how much!
here is what I have: Condenser 25 ml (5/6 fl oz. 0.9 Imp oz) Evaporator 45 ml (1 1/2 fl oz, 1.6 Imp oz) Line or hose 10 ml (1/3 fl oz, 0.4 Imp oz) Receiver/Dryer 10 ml (1/3 fl oz, 0.4 Imp oz) Leakage 25 ml (5/6 fl oz, 0.9 Imp oz) repair Compressor For compressor replacement, subtract the volume of oil drained from the removed compressor from 130 ml (4 1/3 fl oz, 4.6 Imp oz) and drain the calculated volume of oil from the new compressor: 130 ml (4 1/3 fl oz, 4.6 Imp oz) - Volume of removed compressor = Volume to drain from new compressor. NOTE: Even if no oil is drained from the removed compressor, do not drain more than 50 ml (1 2/3 fl oz, 1.8 Imp oz) from
i just found your U-TUBE channel , i have a 2009 honda civic coupe with navigation, sunroof , i subscribed and liked all your videos , Thanks for the all of your help and great advise , much respect from central Massachusetts
My very first step is to remove the lines at the evaporator .... What about recovering the refrigerant ? I'd hope nobody followed this verbatim and dumped a fully charged system spraying themselves with refrigerant oil and supposedly damaging the environment.
I have a question, something no one has included in the evap. install. I should pour 2 oz of pag oil directly into the evaporator before installation, for a new evaporator I mean.
I didn't do that when I replaced mine. Mine is now leaking I believe but I'm not sure if that can cause it. Also, when I put the wire that's inside of the old one into the new one I may have damaged something.
Do you know if that sensor on the evaporator will cause the ac to go from blowing cold to normal air? And if so can it be jumped out? My ac will blow cold air and then stop blowing cold. If I turn the air off for a few minutes and turn it on again it will blow cold again for a few minutes and then blow normal air again.
I have a couple other videos on air conditioning problems, have you watched those, they go over possible causes, I suggest searching my channel for those, also do the control head diagnostic check for codes
Hmm. I see at 4:00 that after you pull off the AC lines that are connected the expansion value, you go through a lot of effort to remove the blower motor assembly and evaporator core on the inside of the car (and even cutting the dash molding. But in another video (czcams.com/video/nCGfezAWoW8/video.html) I saw that the guy just unscrewed he expansion valve and removed it from the same area where the lines were removed, which is probably how Honda was expecting people to do it. Just unscrewing and wiggling out the expansion value, replacing o-rings, and pushing back in the new one with screws. Just thought I'd pass this along as another option for other people watching this.
Appreciate the feedback, I went by the factory manual, I’m not convinced this is possible on this year, are you going to replace your expansion valve this way? If so please update me on this channel and let me know how it works, this will be a huge time saver if it does, the disadvantage would be you would not be able to inspect the evaporator for leaks, I own two Civics, maybe I’ll give it a try and see if it’s worth it, thanks for this additional information
Got a question, I have ice cold AC while sitting or driving around town under 55 give or take, when I hop on the highway and start pushing 70+ my ac just stops blowing fans on high it starts just barely pushing out air. Even when I slow down it doesn’t immediately kick back on. But after I let it sit (gas station run) and crank it back on it usually comes back on.
Expansión valve It’s like 40$ at o’reillys but you have to do everything he just did it get to it. Shops charge about 200-400$ for the labor 🫤 open your hood up next time it stops blowing and see if your ac line is frozen ( mine was) and it’s how I know the expansion Valve is bad
I have a 2006 Honda Civic the problem is that it only heats one part of the car, I mean the part on the driver's side and on the passenger side it only blows cold air, could this be a problem with the expansion tube?
Have you watched this video czcams.com/video/WbPGVfQjAU8/video.html Check codes to see if anything comes up, I’m wasn’t real clear on the explanation of your issue
Hi Danny I replaced my expansion valve hon a 2017 Honda accord sports ac worked fine for a week now no cool air pressures are good on the low side but high pressure side compressor comes on it stay same pressure but low pressure does get lower any sugestión?
Hard to guess not knowing all the criteria and don’t want to steer you in the wrong direction, assuming your Freon level isn’t low possible compressor or Could your new expansion valve have failed? Was this the same reason of replacement the 1st time or was it different
@@dannysdiygarage I think the compressor is fine because low side drops when compressor engage. But the high side stays with the ambiance temperature. I tried my gauges on a different car and they worked fine. When I replaced it I think my low side line will get hot but this time stays normal not cold. When I replaced the expansion valve at the beginning low line was very cold.
U did keep the same evaporator core right? Mine is the original from 2007 never changed it are the expansion valve but nowI Wana change them should I just change the expansion valve are both? Maybe just give my core a good cleaning?
@@dannysdiygarage well being it's the original one. I think I'll just save a headache and change both while I'm n there doin it. It could be leaking cause I have to add some every now an then
Hello Dan, I have a 2014 Honda Civic that I’ve replaced the compressor kit on twice. After replacing and putting Freon it cooled for a few days then went back to blowing hot air. Some days it blows fresh air then hot air…would you believe this can be due to the expansion valve?
it could be, is the freon still in the system? If you had compressor failure metal can get into the system and plug the office in the expansion valve, you may need to flush the system out if there is material in the expansion valve
My 2013 honda civic stopped blowing cold air. I recharge and then it is low again in a few days. I cannot find the leak with the UV dye. So i am wondering if the problem is at the evaporator?
Evaporator leaks are hard to find, I’ve removed many evaporators and once it’s on the bench I would use the black light and find the leak, sometimes you can shine the light into the vents and see die Good luck, update this post when it’s fixed, thanks
@@dannysdiygarage Danny, i took out the expansion valve and there was an obvious leak so i replaced it. Now i try to recharge the system. but after i turn on the vacuum for 10mins and close it, it wouldnt hold vacuum. when i take out the gauge at the low pressure valve, i hear a hiss few like a good 10seconds. So the low pressure valve is leaking? Would that be the reason why it does not hold vacuum. thank you
@@dannysdiygarage Danny, i replaced both of the shrader valves and it still does not hold vacuum. my expansion valve was all wet when i took it out. could it be the evaporator core also leaking? Sorry i didnt have a black light to check it at that time.
@@dannysdiygarage yeah that part seems like it's the main component. OEM if we can.. I'm glad it worked for you. I'm taking it apart according to the video I'll fix it accordingly after that but thanks
You removed ac hoses but forgot to mention that you had already extracted the R134a. If someone with half-assed knowledge tried to use your method, they will spray themselves with extremely dangerous CFC probably disabling themselves permanently. I can't believe no one pointed this out.
Correct, I did not flush the evaporator, I did not have a catastrophic component failure so it wasn’t necessary, I used the oil that was already dripping out of the evaporator to lube the orings, update everything is still working great , appreciate your feedback and you watching this video 👍🏼
They came with the expansion valve I also bought this for anything else BUSY-CORNER 495 Pieces SAE Metric... www.amazon.com/dp/B08R5YC94Z?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
I eliminated everything else, I need to do this on my other Civic also, these expansion valve plug over time Low evaporator (suction) pressure; High evaporator and compressor superheats; Low compressor amp draw; Short-cycling on the low-pressure control; Somewhat high discharge temperature; Low condensing (head) pressure; Low condenser split; and.
Hi Danny, I have a 2008 honda civic. Just had system recovered and recharged because the inside air was not cold. Still not good. A/C low pressure reads 40 psi and kicks on compressor, pressure then goes to 30-35 psi and kicks off. High pressure side is 190 psi. Cabin airflow is 60 degees. Before I tackle this job I would love your imput. Is my expansion valve in need of replacement. You didn't explain how you knew is was bad (unless I missed it somewhere, lol). Anxiously awaiting you answer. Thank you. Best videos on the subject, very efficient.
Make sure your fans are working properly and both are on, make sure the blend door is working, the blend door opens or closes off the heater core air, this is accessible under the Driver R side dash, you can't miss it, turn the knob from cold to hot and you can see it moving, make sure its completely shutting off and not sticking, there is also diagnostics, turn the key off - then hold down the recirculation button and rear defogger button, then turn the ignition with on, the blower will run on various speeds if no codes the recirculation button will not blink. if all is okay, an expansion valve could be the issue, however with out being there I can only make a educated guess, please update this channel to help other once it's fixed, thanks so much
@@dannysdiygarage I started removing everything last night. I have everything removed except I don't have a screwdriver long enough to remove that one screw. I'm going to lowes to pick on up. I will update when I finish this job. thank you so much.
@@dannysdiygarage Update Dan. I finished today, job went well, no leaks, vacuumed system and recharged it. I can only get 60 degrees out of my vents, but it is a lot better than it was prior to this installation. I have no idea what is causing this, compressor runs good, both fans operating as they should. I'm stumped.
In the absence of any supportive evidence for this claim I think this is misinformation. I just examined the way the TEV is against the firewall, it is wider than the hole. It cannot be pulled forward through the hole. The manipulations necessary to work it through the hole in the firewall are constrained by the evaporative core’s tubes being within the TEV. I had my car’s AC in pieces and examined this claim myself. See the video short at the link below. Saw off the piece and remove the interior components. Remember to replace the O-rings while you are at it. czcams.com/users/shortslq4rEBP-1Kw?feature=share
I just watched this video and besides taking all this apart-keeping up with which screws/bolts go where then to put it all back together again looks pretty challenging. How do you get the expansion valve out thru the firewall so you can swap it out???
Hi Dan, you're probably tired of hearing from me, but I have great news.
Last night after I finished charging the system I could only get 60 degrees from vents, so that's when I replied to you.
Now, the next day, I started the car and the A/C, and to my surprise 40 degree cold air was flowing from my vents, so my wife and I took a drive and it remained 40 degrees and it's about 90 degrees outside here in Florida. So it was the expansion valve all along. Crazy, but thank God it's working fine now.
I ordered a compressor this morning before I started the vehicle, and I just cancelled the order, not needed.
Dan, I can't thank you enough, I would never have been able to do this job without you and your videos.
God Bless you and your family.
Question what were your symptoms if I may ask? Im along the lined thinking compressor vs this expansion valve. Did swapping resolve your issues
@@boosted6ers My symptoms were blowing hot air out of the vents, and the pressure on the high side was very high, seem to be a blockage. Hope this helps.
@@rbilardo47 Hey quick question I am having that same issue, my ac was blowing like low 60’s during the day in Houston but I can’t get it to blow any colder
I replaced the ac compressor same thing could this be an expansion valve?
Dan is the man! I had an ac clutch problem, replaced it with an Amazon kit. Two days later, the electromagnet started smelling like ozone, blew the fuse and quit. Got a replacement kit, didn’t know the fuse was blown, and spent four hours backwards troubleshooting it to find the ac clutch fuse had blown. Kick me, I’m stupid sometimes!
I tried the through the firewall method and it was a no go. Thank you for posting this. It guided me through, especially with locating all the fasteners. Thanks for posting a calm,clean language video. Best wishes.
@ 21:30 Evaporator was extracted. I think if the words "Evaporator Replacement" would be included in the title of the film, it would get way more viewers, since there are very few films on the subject. The project is generally considered to be complex and many interested in it would love to see this film. I personally pull it since wanted to see, out of curiosity where the Expansion Valve is located on Honda, but then to my surprise I saw and Evaporator to be extracted. Very glad I did it, I also plan to update everything in one of our cars (2001 Saturn SL2).
@ 26:58 In the Shop Manual for one of our cars it says to put R-12 (mineral) Oil on the o-rings, when you install a Condenser (on corresponding hoses, which go into the Condenser). And they add: don't put PAG Oil (which is in the AC system there, runs on R-134a refrigerant), bcs of possible corrosion issues in the future. Though when I did research about the install many advised w/PAG Oil on those o-rings. I'm not sure if any oil should go on the o-rings in Expansion Valve.
Thank you very much for such informative film.
Yes my thoughts exactly on video title which also should include car model year and I'd think pag oil would be needed on orings
FANTASTIC TEARDOWN!!!
The quality of your videos is awesome! so many different view points help a lot! Keep it up! You have helped me so much with my civic, just yesterday i was able to fix the AC by my self!
Thanks so much, I often wonder if the time I put into these videos is worth it, (CZcams money is minimal) but it’s comments like this which keep me going, helping others in these hard time is very satisfying, thanks so much for the kindness, I appreciate you👍🏼
You're the man, you were so detailed and helpful. I'm doing it in my CRV which is pretty much identical. You helped me out so much Thank You!!!
You’re welcome, good luck👍🏼 and thanks for sharing this information
Great Video!!! I just used the instruction to replace the expansion valve in a 2012 Accord. Now have ice cold AC again!!! Feel like i should you to the christmas list!!!
I appreciate you, thanks for sharing this
This worked for a 2016 Honda CRV EX AWD. I pulled the center console, radio and climate control panel. I also removed some dash screws on the passenger side including the glove box support bar and I was able to sneak the blower motor assembly under the dash while bending up the dash. So I did not need to cut the lower dash section. Thank you for your demonstration.
Watched this video this AM. Replaced my TEV using the steps that I saw here and my O-rings. I now have cold air again!
Awesome: “success”, I love a happy ending. Thanks so much for sharing
It’s Possible to Change the expansion valve from the engine compartment. You have to slightly bend the hole to allow it to slide out. Then bend it back afterwards. Better then cutting the dash in my opinion
Not really cause you can just do a plastic weld after
@@s3ven8n1n3 sure is better it takes about 5 minutes vs an hour
Dang, the patience required to do those hidden bolts/nuts/screws--drives me nuts on this car...I spent an hour the other day pushing on a crowbar with one hand, holding a bolt in another hand, and a socket wrench (in another hand? angels helping?) just getting the one deep bolt back in under the passenger headlight assembly for a simple bulb change (after of course climbing under car and taking off bumper...and before climbing back under car to put bumper back on...crazy!)...what you did getting down in back of engine and not dropping bolts and then flat against floor into deep hidden hole for bolts, only to have to go even more ninja to grab that last hidden screw...if I'm patient I think I can take it apart, but back together again? don't know if I have it in me -- certainly I'm going to need new tools to even try (isn't that really why we DIY? to tell wife it's cheaper to buy all the tools than to pay mechanic?)...is there such a thing as magnetic flexy sockets?
Good luck, yes auto repair has gotten really expensive, yes that tool is available
Always lube the o ring before installing. This eases installation and prevents damage to the o ring when setting the o ring/part
Great information
Lube with what
Thanks for the quality video. Finally got this done and car is cooling correctly for the first time in several years.
Appreciate your gratitude, thanks for adding this
I can't believe that they made the hole on a firewall just big enough so that you could see it and almost get it out but it's small enough so that you have to take the whole dashboard apart
Hello, good video, I've been in the United States for a year, I bought a honda civic lx and the first thing I dared to do without knowing was to change the transmission oil filter and it was thanks to you. I would like to know how to recharge the ac it's not there cooling a lot, thank you very much god bless you
I have videos on this on my channel
This video helped out a lot. Didn’t even have to take the evaporator out to get the expansion valve in luckily. Great video!
Glad it helped
How????
@@ruurios5806 was able to get the bolt out inside the car and it slid right out for me. Kinda had to sit and work it back and forth a few times
Ur awesome sir. Ty for the help! My sister loves you helped me!!
Nice snap on tools. Quarter inch 10 mill impact would make that inside bolt a breeE maybe :)
Great video best one on this topic out there. Helped me get the job done on my wife's 2012 insight. Thank You.
Thanks so much
ALWAYS A GOOD HACK THERE WAS ANOTHER WAY TO DO IT WHICH WAS TO REMOVE THE COMPLETE DASH ASSEMBLY BUT WHY WHEN U HEVE THAT VERY FAST AND HELPFUL TIP LBVS BUT GOOD WORK NICE VIDEO 😎
Appreciate your comment 👍🏼
Note to self, stay away from a Honda Civic ugh. But seriously you made a great well detailed video.
I appreciate that!
Thanks a lot for all your information! Great videos. My issue is, the clutch spins intermittently as it should, when engaged blows ice cold, however, when it stops spinning it only blows warm air. I’ve Replaced the relay, checked fuse, check freon and all where good. Where would i go next?
Have you watched this video here yet, this will give you some checks to make czcams.com/video/WbPGVfQjAU8/video.html
A very good video, thanks! Would you consider doing videos on headliner fabric replacing, catalytic converter and exhaust system replacing, clock reset on a 2006-2011 EXL since it won't update via satellite, Charcoal Canister Evap Vent Purge Solenoid P0497 Repair. A few problems that need to be fixed. Thanks!
Yes evap diagnostic video is on my list, I just haven’t gotten to it yet, the others I’m not sure if they will happen, but evap system, YES
How did you diagnose that’s you had a bad expansion valve?
Good evening Danny, hope you are well. Thank you for your exceptional information on car repairs. I was going to make an attempt at this job, found where you purchased the valve, but I was hoping you would be able to provide a link for the o-rings and for the compressor oil to lubricate the o-rings. Thank you for your time in this matter.
I purchased this BUSY-CORNER 495 Pieces SAE Metric... www.amazon.com/dp/B08R5YC94Z?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Im so jealous. Mine is barely able to do 15 degree difference. Im doing my expansion valve next
Hi Danny, do you have to remove the refrigerant first before disconnecting the tubes?
@@mutt251 yes, sorry if that wasn’t clear
hello!
very educational clip thank you!
what was the reason you had to replace this valve?
what were the symptoms?
Air not getting cold and the readings on the gauge didn’t make sense
Damn, that music just tops off the help this video provides😅! The previous video needs the same track.
alway appreciate nice comment, thanks for taking the time and watching the videos Gano
Great info and music too. And many of today's women think they don't need men...smdh
Jiffy lube removes freon for free. Which is surprisingly cool. To protect the environment and all
Thanks for sharing this, wish everyone would do the same
@dannysdiygarage so I'm getting 30-33 degrees difference now after compressor replacement and fresh oil. It seems like my expansion valve was sticking but now the oil has helped. Would replacing the valve help get me to 40 degrees or likely thats the best it will get?
@@vinceparker2888 yes, the meatering valve/expansion valve is responsible for this and will have a huge impact on getting your vehicle to the best temperature possible, as well as correct freon in the system, air flow, and a number of other things
Maybe there were others who made this same comment and their comments were deleted somehow. I was surprised that you didn't mention evacuating the system of freon as the first step (either with your own system or taking it to a shop to reclaim). Then, I discovered later in the video that you obviously hadn't done that step and just let the system depressurize into the air. While modern R134a freon is not as destructive to the atmosphere as R12 was, there are still laws on the books that make this practice illegal. This video is encouraging people to unknowingly break the environmental law in the US. Maybe put some disclaimer to tell folks to start out evacuating the system of freon first?
That’s a great point, hopefully people do the right thing, some shops will actually do this for free, others will charge up to $100, I know this because I researched it and was surprised of the cost, I believe this was mentioned in one of the other AC videos I did, once again Great point 👍🏼
Thanks for sharing. Is this the only way to replace the valve. I saw a video for a accord and they did it by disconnecting the lines in the hood then pulling it out.
Yes this is the correct and only way to do this, follow the video steps, it’s not very hard and it goes quick once you know where the hidden screw are, I showed exactly where they are in the disassembly.
Hi Danny. Im a huge fan of yours and your videos are amazing! Im not familiar with autozone but you can rent tools and when you return it they give you back the money is that right?
That is correct, many auto parts stores do this because they hope you’ll purchase the parts to fix your car at their store, I suggest buying parts from that store if you’re using this service, it’s the right thing to do 👍🏼
Does configuration of the AC system apply to 10th generation civics as well?
The evap expansion valve in my fiances 10th gen civic as well as the condenser need replaced. The stealership quoted us $4,100 to replace the parts along with a front cv axle.
This all seems too easy to be that costly.
i got this code on my hrv 2020 EVAP system incorrect purge flow P0441 Evap system low pressure purge line performance permanent cant clear it codes P0441 AND P04F1 any help?
Oh boy that looks like a back breaking job. I remember replacing a blend door actuator and that was tiring. I believe the evaporator is bad. How do you know it just the expansion valve and not the entire evaporator? Test for leaks? Thanks for your help I’ve watched all 3 AC videos.
If the evaporator is bad you’ll see oil residue where it’s leaking, on my vehicle there was none
Nice work! Clean job. Seems pretty extensive but very doable. Was this the actual issue? My 2011 civic Is currently having ac blowing cold then blowing warm, but thinking its ac compressor issue/ clutch.
I have a video that goes through diagnosing and possible causes also on my page
Thanks for the help! Awesome video! I wonder How you don’t swear every time your drill bit comes off! Impressive sir!
Appreciate your comment
Truly great video. How much PAG oil needs to be added when changing the evaporator?
I’m pretty sure it’s 2oz
I just read it’s 1.5oz 2oz if it’s been leaking, hopefully this helps
Such an amazing video. Loved watching it. I have a hissing noise coming from my passenger side AC vents and it’s intermittent and only when I hit the gas pedals and car is in motion. Could this be an expansion valve issue or just low on gas. It’s a brand new car and dealer says this is normal but it’s annoying.
I doubt it. Appreciate you nice comment 👍🏼
the hissing means you’re out of refrigerant
What brand was the original expansion valve?
@@smittysmitty4681 I don’t remember
@@dannysdiygarage ah gotcha ok just realized this video is 2 yrs old 👍
Should you replace the core as well ?
If you see oil on it or other signs of leaking, definitely, I did not replace it and everything worked fine
Question, I just need to replace the expansion valve, can it be done from the firewall? I don’t want to tear the glove box down.
I’m not aware of that shortcut being successful, let me know if it works, Honda recommends doing it this way
Yeah it was impossible without hacking or cutting. I did it while watching your video and it helped a lot! Thank you for the good work 💪🏽
Sir, Great video can you tell me what your symptom was to make you replace the valve, thks
It wasn’t blowing cold , also when I checked my pressure with the gauges the pressures were not making sense, I also added R 134a and it made no difference
Thanks Scott for the support 👍🏼
@@dannysdiygarage Awesome sir can you tell me what the valve cost, I have a 2007 honda civic EX coupe thats not blowing cold air, thks
@@scottmagyar I just bought mine and it's about 45$. Check advance auto parts.
Hi @dannysdiygarage awesome video, very detailed, Question? when replacing the Evaporator how much Oil should I put back in?
1.5oz
@@dannysdiygarage Thank you so much for the quick response and detailed Video A+
As others have mentioned, its possible to pull out the expansion valve from the firewall side and avoid this whole disassembly. It requires some 90deg needle nose pliers and picks. You may have to very gently shave part of the opening with a dremel. Keep everything clea. Still, FAR easier than this method.
whatever way works, this was not a difficult job and this is how all the manuals and Pro-Demand tell you to do it, if you have a short cut that works and isn't a hack, I would love to learn it. Please send me a link to the video of this being done on a Honda Civic, appreciate the feedback
i want try remove from outside😢😢...too much work do it from inside😢😢😢
I removed the expansion valve from the inside.... It wasn't hard..
@@hacatan24from the motor? On the firewall?
Most Honda's you have to go in from the cabin unlike other manufacturers where you can swap out the TXV from the engine compartment. I would have used some PAG oil on the O-rings when inserting back into the evaporator.
Hi danny what a great video exactly what i was looking for ! Can i do the same with the heater core?
heater core is a different process
do you need to discharge all the refrigerant before you do this?
Yes shops usually will do this for free in my area
How do you drain the Freon before attempting this rip and replace?
Take it to a shop have them evacuate the refrigerant
On the Si is the same process?
Yes
Nice video, can you please tell me how much oil should i add after changing the evaporator? Knowing that it was leaking all of the refrigerant. And I noticed some oil came out. And I don't know how much!
here is what I have:
Condenser
25 ml (5/6 fl oz. 0.9 Imp oz)
Evaporator
45 ml (1 1/2 fl oz, 1.6 Imp oz)
Line or hose 10 ml (1/3 fl oz, 0.4 Imp oz)
Receiver/Dryer 10 ml (1/3 fl oz, 0.4 Imp oz)
Leakage
25 ml (5/6 fl oz, 0.9 Imp oz)
repair
Compressor For compressor replacement, subtract the volume of oil drained from the removed compressor from 130 ml (4 1/3 fl oz, 4.6 Imp oz) and drain the calculated volume of oil from the new compressor: 130 ml (4
1/3 fl oz, 4.6 Imp oz) - Volume of
removed compressor = Volume to
drain from new compressor. NOTE: Even if no oil is drained from the removed compressor, do not drain more than 50 ml (1 2/3 fl oz, 1.8 Imp oz) from
@@dannysdiygarage thank you for your time.
So because I had a leakage in the evaporator I should add 25 ml?
Or 45 ml because I changed it?
45 ml
@@dannysdiygarage thank you so much, you saved me ☺️☺️
my question my car when I am in Highway is cold when I stop in traffic and done come back regular I don't know what I should do
I replaced the expansion valve and my low side is really high. What could it be ?
Also still not blowing cold
Nice work ..
i have a question:
why did u changed the valve ?? did the A/C not cooling enough ?
Thanks & Amazing video
Correct, it wasn't cooling properly and everything else appeared to be working, this was the most likely cause
@@dannysdiygarage Thanks 😊
Thanks 👍👍👍
Appreciate that
i just found your U-TUBE channel , i have a 2009 honda civic coupe with navigation, sunroof , i subscribed and liked all your videos , Thanks for the all of your help and great advise , much respect from central Massachusetts
I appreciate your kindness, I’ll keep the videos coming 👍🏼
Great video 👍🏻
Thanks so much
My very first step is to remove the lines at the evaporator .... What about recovering the refrigerant ? I'd hope nobody followed this verbatim and dumped a fully charged system spraying themselves with refrigerant oil and supposedly damaging the environment.
I hope so also
awesome video. Any interest in making a video of replacing an expansion valve in my 01 accord?
Why are you local?
I have a question, something no one has included in the evap. install. I should pour 2 oz of pag oil directly into the evaporator before installation, for a new evaporator I mean.
Yes, pour approximately 1.5 oz into the evaporator, that’s the easiest way
I didn't do that when I replaced mine. Mine is now leaking I believe but I'm not sure if that can cause it. Also, when I put the wire that's inside of the old one into the new one I may have damaged something.
Do you know if that sensor on the evaporator will cause the ac to go from blowing cold to normal air? And if so can it be jumped out? My ac will blow cold air and then stop blowing cold. If I turn the air off for a few minutes and turn it on again it will blow cold again for a few minutes and then blow normal air again.
I have a couple other videos on air conditioning problems, have you watched those, they go over possible causes, I suggest searching my channel for those, also do the control head diagnostic check for codes
Thanks i will start tomoro on mi civic SI
Follow the video, I tried to show everything and all hidden bolts, good luck
Hmm. I see at 4:00 that after you pull off the AC lines that are connected the expansion value, you go through a lot of effort to remove the blower motor assembly and evaporator core on the inside of the car (and even cutting the dash molding. But in another video (czcams.com/video/nCGfezAWoW8/video.html) I saw that the guy just unscrewed he expansion valve and removed it from the same area where the lines were removed, which is probably how Honda was expecting people to do it. Just unscrewing and wiggling out the expansion value, replacing o-rings, and pushing back in the new one with screws. Just thought I'd pass this along as another option for other people watching this.
Appreciate the feedback, I went by the factory manual, I’m not convinced this is possible on this year, are you going to replace your expansion valve this way? If so please update me on this channel and let me know how it works, this will be a huge time saver if it does, the disadvantage would be you would not be able to inspect the evaporator for leaks, I own two Civics, maybe I’ll give it a try and see if it’s worth it, thanks for this additional information
Got a question, I have ice cold AC while sitting or driving around town under 55 give or take, when I hop on the highway and start pushing 70+ my ac just stops blowing fans on high it starts just barely pushing out air. Even when I slow down it doesn’t immediately kick back on. But after I let it sit (gas station run) and crank it back on it usually comes back on.
Expansión valve It’s like 40$ at o’reillys but you have to do everything he just did it get to it. Shops charge about 200-400$ for the labor 🫤 open your hood up next time it stops blowing and see if your ac line is frozen ( mine was) and it’s how I know the expansion Valve is bad
I have a 2006 Honda Civic the problem is that it only heats one part of the car, I mean the part on the driver's side and on the passenger side it only blows cold air, could this be a problem with the expansion tube?
Have you watched this video czcams.com/video/WbPGVfQjAU8/video.html
Check codes to see if anything comes up, I’m wasn’t real clear on the explanation of your issue
Hi Danny I replaced my expansion valve hon a 2017 Honda accord sports ac worked fine for a week now no cool air pressures are good on the low side but high pressure side compressor comes on it stay same pressure but low pressure does get lower any sugestión?
Hard to guess not knowing all the criteria and don’t want to steer you in the wrong direction, assuming your Freon level isn’t low possible compressor or Could your new expansion valve have failed? Was this the same reason of replacement the 1st time or was it different
@@dannysdiygarage
I think the compressor is fine because low side drops when compressor engage. But the high side stays with the ambiance temperature. I tried my gauges on a different car and they worked fine. When I replaced it I think my low side line will get hot but this time stays normal not cold. When I replaced the expansion valve at the beginning low line was very cold.
Great video! Can you tell me how much oil you added ?
I only replaced the expansion valve, so no oil was added
I think that the valve can be removed from the front to avoid the mess that has to be done inside.
Good luck, let me know if that works out
another question. How do you get refrigerant 134 out of the system? with the same autozone vacuum? in that step I get complicated
@@pasivo2009 some shops will remove it for free, they do this so you won't release it into the air also it valuable to them because they can reuse it.
thanks the knowlarge
Anytime
U did keep the same evaporator core right? Mine is the original from 2007 never changed it are the expansion valve but nowI Wana change them should I just change the expansion valve are both? Maybe just give my core a good cleaning?
The core is good unless there is oil on it which indicates a leak
@@dannysdiygarage well being it's the original one. I think I'll just save a headache and change both while I'm n there doin it. It could be leaking cause I have to add some every now an then
For the love of Petey.. please add year of car to video title
Hello Dan, I have a 2014 Honda Civic that I’ve replaced the compressor kit on twice. After replacing and putting Freon it cooled for a few days then went back to blowing hot air. Some days it blows fresh air then hot air…would you believe this can be due to the expansion valve?
@dannysdiygarage
it could be, is the freon still in the system? If you had compressor failure metal can get into the system and plug the office in the expansion valve, you may need to flush the system out if there is material in the expansion valve
Thank you!
You’re welcome Appreciate you watching
Hey Dan I need some help with my Honda civic ac
What’s the problem
Very good.
I appreciate that👍🏼
Is an exelent work
Appreciate it
What's the screw on the bottom of the expansion valve for?
I'm not sure, maybe a factory adjustment
My 2013 honda civic stopped blowing cold air. I recharge and then it is low again in a few days. I cannot find the leak with the UV dye. So i am wondering if the problem is at the evaporator?
Evaporator leaks are hard to find, I’ve removed many evaporators and once it’s on the bench I would use the black light and find the leak, sometimes you can shine the light into the vents and see die
Good luck, update this post when it’s fixed, thanks
@@dannysdiygarage Danny, i took out the expansion valve and there was an obvious leak so i replaced it. Now i try to recharge the system. but after i turn on the vacuum for 10mins and close it, it wouldnt hold vacuum. when i take out the gauge at the low pressure valve, i hear a hiss few like a good 10seconds. So the low pressure valve is leaking? Would that be the reason why it does not hold vacuum. thank you
@@andypham9125 I would fix that then recheck it, hopefully that's all it is
@@dannysdiygarage Danny, i replaced both of the shrader valves and it still does not hold vacuum. my expansion valve was all wet when i took it out. could it be the evaporator core also leaking? Sorry i didnt have a black light to check it at that time.
As far as a leak, more likely an evaporator then a expansion valve
What is the function of the expansion valve?
Basically It meters the correct amount of Freon. If it plugs not enough Freon passes and is able to cool
thank you
You’re welcome, thanks for taking the time to comment
Grasias
You’re welcome
Did that plastic piece make a difference in the expansion valve
No, everything works perfectly
@@dannysdiygarage yeah that part seems like it's the main component. OEM if we can.. I'm glad it worked for you. I'm taking it apart according to the video I'll fix it accordingly after that but thanks
You’re welcome, good luck 👍🏼
You removed ac hoses but forgot to mention that you had already extracted the R134a. If someone with half-assed knowledge tried to use your method, they will spray themselves with extremely dangerous CFC probably disabling themselves permanently. I can't believe no one pointed this out.
Natural selection lol
Thanks for pointing out my mistake, hopefully that won't happen
1 you did not flush evaporator 2 did not use refrigerant oil to lubricate O rings before putting expansion valve.
Correct, I did not flush the evaporator, I did not have a catastrophic component failure so it wasn’t necessary, I used the oil that was already dripping out of the evaporator to lube the orings, update everything is still working great , appreciate your feedback and you watching this video 👍🏼
There has to be an easier way than removing the whole assembly. :0
There’s a right way and a hack way
do you know what size o-rings those are?
They came with the expansion valve I also bought this for anything else BUSY-CORNER 495 Pieces SAE Metric... www.amazon.com/dp/B08R5YC94Z?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
How did you know this was the issue with the AC?
I eliminated everything else, I need to do this on my other Civic also, these expansion valve plug over time
Low evaporator (suction) pressure;
High evaporator and compressor superheats;
Low compressor amp draw;
Short-cycling on the low-pressure control;
Somewhat high discharge temperature;
Low condensing (head) pressure;
Low condenser split; and.
how do you add the oil in a brand new evaporator?
Just add it in to the evaporator while it’s out
@@dannysdiygarage does it matter which side hole I pour it in?
No, either hole
Hi Danny, I have a 2008 honda civic. Just had system recovered and recharged because the inside air was not cold. Still not good. A/C low pressure reads 40 psi and kicks on compressor, pressure then goes to 30-35 psi and kicks off. High pressure side is 190 psi. Cabin airflow is 60 degees. Before I tackle this job I would love your imput. Is my expansion valve in need of replacement. You didn't explain how you knew is was bad (unless I missed it somewhere, lol). Anxiously awaiting you answer. Thank you. Best videos on the subject, very efficient.
How does it blow when you’re driving down the road, on the highway
Make sure your fans are working properly and both are on, make sure the blend door is working, the blend door opens or closes off the heater core air, this is accessible under the Driver R side dash, you can't miss it, turn the knob from cold to hot and you can see it moving, make sure its completely shutting off and not sticking, there is also diagnostics, turn the key off - then hold down the recirculation button and rear defogger button, then turn the ignition with on, the blower will run on various speeds if no codes the recirculation button will not blink.
if all is okay, an expansion valve could be the issue, however with out being there
I can only make a educated guess, please update this channel to help other once it's fixed, thanks so much
@@dannysdiygarage I started removing everything last night. I have everything removed except I don't have a screwdriver long enough to remove that one screw. I'm going to lowes to pick on up. I will update when I finish this job. thank you so much.
@@dannysdiygarage Update Dan. I finished today, job went well, no leaks, vacuumed system and recharged it. I can only get 60 degrees out of my vents, but it is a lot better than it was prior to this installation. I have no idea what is causing this, compressor runs good, both fans operating as they should. I'm stumped.
Did you check the blend door,
When you buy the valve??
Denso 475-2073 A/C Expansion... www.amazon.com/dp/B01LX0NXWV?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Amazon
Unless that hole was just way too small it looked like you could have removed it from under the hood
I've would be curious to see if that works, I doubt it though
what a fuggin nightmare bru
Rule of thumb, if you are replacing the expansion valve, you must as well replace the evaporator since you removing to get into the expansion valve.
I haven’t seen that written anywhere, depending on your budget, my budget is small, thanks for sharing your thoughts
You didn't say anything about removing the refrigerant
Best to have a shop remove this, some do it for free, I thought I mentioned it, sorry
@@dannysdiygarage tx
Why are you doing this?
AC wasn’t blowing cold and the proper amount of Freon was in the vehicle,
exactly my car like that I have a feron compressor is good I don't have a leak but my car doesn't cold too much what I should do?
Very difficult German car easy more than
This job can all be done from under the hood. No cutting your car up with a hacksaw blade.
No, this is the easiest and least destructive way, the piece that was cut, serves no purpose, do it the way I showed you, it’s easier then it looks
@@dannysdiygarage You CAN do this job with out all of those extra steps. All under the hood.
In the absence of any supportive evidence for this claim I think this is misinformation. I just examined the way the TEV is against the firewall, it is wider than the hole. It cannot be pulled forward through the hole. The manipulations necessary to work it through the hole in the firewall are constrained by the evaporative core’s tubes being within the TEV.
I had my car’s AC in pieces and examined this claim myself. See the video short at the link below.
Saw off the piece and remove the interior components. Remember to replace the O-rings while you are at it.
czcams.com/users/shortslq4rEBP-1Kw?feature=share
I just watched this video and besides taking all this apart-keeping up with which screws/bolts go where then to put it all back together again looks pretty challenging. How do you get the expansion valve out thru the firewall so you can swap it out???
I showed all the steps, it’s not a bad job, easier then it looks
$500 job
Is that what they’re getting to do that job, that’s crazy