Car A/C pressure chart
People search for “car A/C pressure charts” when they want a quick way to connect a gauge reading to what’s happening in an automotive air conditioning system. The tricky part: many “pressure charts” on the internet mix together several different ideas (static pressure, running pressures, and saturation PT data). This page explains the differences so you can use charts responsibly and avoid false conclusions.
Two different things often called “pressure chart”
- System pressure chart (high side / low side): a rule-of-thumb table that claims “normal” gauge pressures at certain ambient temperatures. These ranges are highly dependent on vehicle, controls, and test conditions.
- Refrigerant PT chart: the thermodynamic saturation relationship between pressure and temperature (Psat(T) / Tsat(P)) for a refrigerant. This is a property curve, not a diagnostic range.
FluidTool focuses on the second category (thermodynamic properties). That data can still be useful for field interpretation — but only when you understand what the sensors are actually measuring.
Static pressure (system OFF) vs running pressures (system ON)
When the system is off and the refrigerant has had time to equalize, the pressure tends to move toward a saturation value that corresponds to the refrigerant’s bulk temperature somewhere in the system. It may not match the outdoor air temperature, especially after heat soak or if parts of the loop are at different temperatures.
When the system is running, pressures are the result of heat transfer and flow: compressor speed/displacement, condenser airflow, evaporator load, expansion device behavior, and control strategy all matter. That’s why generic “normal pressure” numbers can be misleading.
Why automotive A/C pressures vary so much
- Ambient conditions: outdoor temperature, humidity, and solar load change condenser and evaporator heat transfer.
- Airflow: vehicle speed, fan staging, and heat exchanger cleanliness affect condensing/gas cooler performance.
- Compressor control: variable displacement, clutch cycling, and inverter-driven compressors can change pressures quickly.
- Expansion device: orifice tube vs TXV/EEV changes how the system responds to transients and load.
- Refrigerant type: R134a and R1234yf have different saturation curves; CO2 (R744) behaves very differently near/above the critical point.
- Measurement details: gauge vs absolute pressure, sensor placement, and line pressure drop can shift interpretations. See Gauge vs absolute pressure (psig vs psia).
A safer way to use PT data (no “target pressures”)
Instead of using a generic diagnostic chart, a more robust approach is to use saturation properties as a reference:
- Select the refrigerant you’re working with (for example R134a or R1234yf).
- From a measured pressure, compute Tsat(P) (the temperature at which that refrigerant would be saturated at the same pressure).
- Compare Tsat(P) to a measured line temperature at the same location to reason about superheat and subcooling.
This still doesn’t replace OEM procedures. But it helps you separate “property math” from “system behavior,” which is where many misdiagnoses begin.
Special note: CO2 (R744) is not a typical PT-chart system
Some vehicles use CO2 (R744). CO2 cycles can run transcritical (above the critical point), where the “high side” is a gas cooler rather than a condenser. In that regime, there is no single condensing saturation temperature — so simple PT-chart intuition can break down.
Using FluidTool
You can use FluidTool to explore saturation curves and build intuition for how pressure and saturation temperature relate for common automotive refrigerants. This page is educational — do not use it as a repair guide.
Related concepts
- Refrigerant PT chart: what Tsat(P) / Psat(T) represents (and common pitfalls).
- Subcooling (ΔTsc): the liquid-side “distance from saturation” concept.
- Superheat & Subcooling: how to interpret line temperature vs saturation temperature.
- Critical point: why CO2 behaves differently near/above critical conditions.