A/C Refrigerant Pressure Sensor Circuit Diagnosis
Schematic:
CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
The A/C system uses an A/C refrigerant pressure sensor mounted in the high side of the A/C system to monitor A/C refrigerant pressure. The PCM utilizes this information in order to disable the A/C compressor clutch when the A/C system pressure is out of range. The PCM also uses A/C refrigerant pressure sensor to enable the engine coolant fans when the A/C refrigerant pressure is high.
The PCM supplies a 5 volt reference, a signal circuit, and a ground circuit to the A/C refrigerant pressure sensor. As the A/C pressure increases or decreases, the resistance of the sensor changes and varies the amount of signal voltage detected by the PCM.
DIAGNOSTIC AIDS
IMPORTANT:
^ Remove any debris from the PCM connector surfaces before servicing the PCM. Inspect the PCM connector gaskets when diagnosing/replacing the PCM. Ensure that the gaskets are installed correctly. The gaskets prevent contaminate intrusion into the PCM.
^ For any test that requires probing the PCM or a component harness connector, use the J 35616-A connector test adapter Kit. Using this kit prevents damage to the harness/component terminals. Refer to Using Connector Test Adapters in Diagrams.
The following may cause an intermittent:
^ Poor connections; Refer to Testing for Intermittent and Poor Connections in Diagrams.
^ Mis-routed harness.
^ Rubbed through wire insulation.
^ Broken wire inside the insulation.
If the test did not fail this ignition cycle, move the related electrical harnesses and the connectors while monitoring a scan tool.
For an intermittent, refer to Symptoms. Symptom Related Diagnostic Procedures
TEST DESCRIPTION
Steps 1 - 5:
Steps 6 - 16:
The numbers below refer to the step numbers on the diagnostic table.
3. The normal A/C voltage is between 1.0 and 1.8 volts.
5. If the A/C pressure/volt age stays high after disconnecting the A/C refrigerant pressure sensor electrical connector, this indicates the signal circuit is shorted to a voltage.
7. This step tests for a good ground circuit.
8. This step verifies the integrity of the A/C refrigerant pressure sensor signal circuit.
11. If you have thoroughly inspected the 5.0 volt reference circuit (for opens, shorts to ground, PCM connections etc.) and is OK, then replace the PCM.
12. If you have thoroughly inspected the ground circuit for opens and the PCM connections are OK, then replace the PCM.