Mon–Fri 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Why it matters

A/C is a sealed system — if it's low, it's leaking.

Automotive air conditioning is a closed loop. Refrigerant doesn't get "used up" or "worn out" — it circulates forever as long as the system is sealed. So when your A/C stops blowing cold, the refrigerant didn't evaporate. It leaked out somewhere, and until that leak is found and fixed, any refrigerant you add is going to leak right back out. The cans of "A/C recharge" from the parts store are a temporary patch that masks the real problem and often damages the system's moisture-absorbing drier in the process.

The right answer is to find the leak. Modern A/C systems use UV dye, electronic sniffers, and nitrogen pressure testing to pinpoint exactly where refrigerant is escaping — a cracked condenser from a rock strike, a worn O-ring at a hose fitting, a pinhole in the evaporator buried behind the dash, or a compressor shaft seal that's giving up. Each of those is a different repair with a different cost, and guessing is expensive.

Modern vehicles also use one of two refrigerants — R-134a on older cars and trucks, or R-1234yf on most 2015-and-newer vehicles — and they require separate equipment, separate recovery machines, and dramatically different refrigerant costs. We're set up for both, we never mix them, and we recover and recycle refrigerant the way federal law requires.

What's involved

Diagnose, repair, recharge to spec.

A proper A/C service is more than a can of refrigerant. Here's what actually happens when you bring in a vehicle that isn't cooling the way it should.

Performance test

We put gauges on the high and low sides, measure vent temperature at idle and at 1500 rpm, and see how the system is actually behaving before we touch anything. The numbers tell us whether it's low on charge, overcharged, restricted, or the compressor isn't pumping.

Leak detection

UV dye tracing, electronic leak detectors, and nitrogen pressure testing to find the exact point refrigerant is escaping. A vehicle that's low on charge will be low again in a month if we don't fix the leak first.

Compressor service

When the compressor clutch is dragging, the pulley bearing is noisy, or the compressor itself has lost internal pumping, we replace it with a quality unit, install a new receiver-drier, flush the system as needed, and recharge to manufacturer specification.

Condenser replacement

The condenser sits at the front of the vehicle and takes the first hit from road debris. Bent fins, rock strikes, and corrosion are common causes of refrigerant leaks. We replace damaged condensers with OE-quality parts.

Evaporator & expansion valve

The evaporator lives behind the dashboard. When it leaks, or the expansion valve clogs, cooling suffers and refrigerant escapes inside the cabin. It's big labor, but sometimes it's the right repair — we'll tell you straight if it is.

Hoses, O-rings & fittings

Most small leaks live at fittings — O-rings harden with age and heat, hose crimps loosen, and fittings seep. Replacing the O-ring is a small job that prevents losing refrigerant for the life of the vehicle.

Blower motor & cabin air

Weak airflow isn't always an A/C problem — it's often the blower motor, resistor, or a clogged cabin air filter. We check airflow before chasing cold-side issues, because no airflow means no cooling regardless of system pressure.

Evacuation & proper recharge

After any repair, the system is recovered, evacuated under deep vacuum for a full cycle to boil out moisture, then charged by weight to the manufacturer's exact refrigerant and oil specification. A system charged "by feel" is a system that will fail early.

Post-repair verification

Vent temperatures, pressures at idle and high rpm, cycling behavior, and a final check for any remaining leaks. You leave knowing the system is cooling the way it should — not hoping it is.

Signs it's time

Your A/C is telling you something.

Any of these mean the system isn't working the way it was designed to — and in most cases, the earlier you come in, the smaller the repair.

Air isn't cold anymore

The most obvious sign — and almost always a leak. Low refrigerant raises the low-side pressure above freezing and the evaporator stops making cold air.

A/C works at highway speed, not at idle

At idle, the condenser relies on the electric cooling fan to move air through it. A lazy fan, a plugged condenser, or a marginal charge will cool fine going down the road but warm up at a stop light.

Weak airflow from the vents

Plugged cabin air filter, failing blower motor, or a bad blower resistor. Still worth fixing because no amount of cold refrigerant matters if the air can't move.

Grinding, squealing, or clattering when A/C is on

Compressor bearings, clutch chatter, or internal compressor failure. When the compressor lets go internally it can spread metal through the entire system — catching it early saves a lot of parts.

Musty or mildew smell from the vents

Water collects on the evaporator and drains to the outside. When the drain clogs or bacteria grow on the evaporator, the smell is unmistakable. It's a cleaning and treatment job, not an A/C failure.

Water or wetness inside the cabin

An evaporator drain that's plugged will push condensate onto the floor instead of outside. If your passenger-side carpet is wet, the drain is the first thing to check — before anyone assumes it's a leak from the outside.

A/C light flashes or turns off

Many vehicles monitor A/C pressure and will disable the compressor if the charge drops too low — protecting the compressor from damage. A dash A/C button that won't stay on is usually a charge or pressure-switch issue.

It worked last year, doesn't this year

A/C systems that sit idle over a winter can leak at seals that dried out. A spring recheck before the first heat wave is the cheapest time to find a small leak, before your condenser turns into a fountain on the hottest day of the year.

Get cold air back before the heat hits.

Proper diagnosis, proper repair, proper recharge. No mystery cans, no shortcuts — the A/C fixed the right way the first time.

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