What is an Air Conditioning Compressor?
The pump that makes your air conditioning blow cold.
Simplified animation — not to scale.
In plain English
The AC compressor is the heart of your air conditioning system. Driven by the engine's serpentine belt, it pressurises the refrigerant gas that absorbs heat from inside the car and dumps it outside — leaving cool, dehumidified air to blow out of your vents.
"Like a fridge for your car — the compressor is the pump that moves heat from inside out."
How it works
When you press the AC button, an electromagnetic clutch engages the compressor pulley. It squashes refrigerant gas into a hot, high-pressure state; the condenser at the front of the car cools it down; an expansion valve lets it suddenly drop in pressure inside the cabin evaporator, which makes it bitterly cold. The blower fan pushes cabin air over that cold evaporator and out of the dashboard vents.
Signs of trouble
- ⚠Air still blows but isn't cold
- ⚠Loud rattle or squeal when AC is switched on
- ⚠Visible oily refrigerant leaks
- ⚠AC clutch not engaging (no click when turned on)
- ⚠Cabin air smells damp or musty
£500–£1,200 fitted (plus a re-gas)
Always get a written quote. Prices vary by car, region, and parts brand.
