Hi Guys
Is there someone out there that doesn’t mind helping me out, I’ve got a problem with an aircon compressor on my car and I don’t happen to have an inner cabinet parliamentary retirement pension so I’m having a go at repairing it myself in an attempt to keep the repair cost down.
I’ve included some photos and done a sketch as best I can to illustrate how the aircon should work.
Just to bring you up to speed the car went in for an mot and I was told the aircon clutch was loose and making a hell of a racket.
When I looked at it I was surprised it past the mot, the clutch had completely come off and was rattling around inside the aircon pulley, it was the only thing stopping it from falling onto the road, the screw and spacer had gone completely no doubt dropped off along the road somewhere, which brings me to the problem I’ve got.
I don’t know what the screw looks like, if you take a look at my sketch in view “A” it shows the aircon compressor coil and the aircon compressor pulley which has a shaft with external splines and a blind M6 tapped hole.
View “B” is the aircon compressor clutch with internal splines but it also has an M8 through tapped hole.
Whenever the engine is running the aircon pulley is also rotating being driven via a poly v belt which in turn takes its drive from the crankshaft.
The pulley simply rotates freely on the stationary aircon compressor shaft.
There is a fixed coil which the aircon pulley rotates around, there is also a gap between the faces marked xxxxx on the aircon pulley and the aircon clutch, this is usually set by a spacing washer.
If the aircon is switched off inside the car the coil is not energised so the gap between the pulley and clutch remains, but once the aircon is switch on an electro-magnetic field is created which draws the clutch along the splines until both faces marked xxxxx are in contact with each other, causing the clutch to also rotate with the driven pulley and because its splined onto the shaft, it then turns the compressor shaft thus in turn starts to pump refrigerant around the system.
That’s what is supposed to happen, right or wrong I fitted a screw an M6 screw through the M8 hole in the clutch tightening it into the M6 hole in the end of the shaft only to find I’d locked the whole thing up so the clutch is in constant contact with pulley so the aircon never switches off irrespective of if the coil is energised or not.
Question does anyone know how I can fix the clutch to the shaft without locking everything up but allowing it to float once the coil is energised.
I’d thought about putting a longer screw in so it bottoms tight against the bottom of the blind hole in the shaft but making it long enough to leave a gap between the underside of the head and the clutch.
The thing is I have never heard of a screw relying on being tight by having it bottom in a hole.
I also thought I could tighten it so far and using Loctite let it set, but then there’s always that nagging thought, if the Loctite fails I’ll have the same problem all over again.
Now there is just one last possibility I can think of, years ago there used to be different classes of thread fits for example if you screw a stud into something and you don’t want the stud to come out when undoing a nut, the thread on that end of the stud was different to the nut end, at least I think that's how it worked. Having said that I can't imagine for one moment the car manufactures going to that trouble.
As to the M8 tapped hole in the clutch I haven’t a clue what that is for, all I know is it can’t be there just to make it look pretty.
Right guys that’s my tale, is there someone out there who can put me right on the problem.
How do I fix the clutch and allow it to slide along the shaft and what is the M8 hole for.
I hope I haven’t sent everyone to sleep who reads this post and to those who are still awake my thanks once again for any help you can offer.
Clive
Edited By Clive B 1 on 30/06/2018 22:35:29