How Do Climate Control And Air Conditioning Systems Actually Work?

Here's an explanation of why climate control is technically 'smart' air conditioning
How Do Climate Control And Air Conditioning Systems Actually Work?

Much like 4WD and AWD, one can be forgiven for thinking that the automotive luxuries of A/C and climate control are one in the same. In actual fact, a car specced with climate control as an option will always be more expensive than its A/C counterpart – so why is that the case?

Let’s start with what A/C is. Air conditioning involves a process of condensing and drying a fluid until it is cold, at which point it’s then be pumped into the cabin via fans to offset the warm ambient temperature of the surroundings. It does this using a fairly busy system of compressors, heat exchangers and fans to allow cold air to enter the cabin.

How does A/C produce cool air?

How Do Climate Control And Air Conditioning Systems Actually Work?

Step 1: Refrigerant in a gas form is compressed by the A/C compressor which runs off a belt, compressing the gas into a high-pressure state

Step 2: This refrigerant then enters a condenser – a heat exchanger normally placed in front of the radiator - where it changes state into a liquid

Step 3: The refrigerant then enters a dryer where most of the moisture is removed from the liquid

Step 4: The liquid is then pumped through an orifice tube which takes the refrigerant from high pressure to low pressure, changing its state into a cold gas

Step 5: The cold refrigerant in its gas state then flows through an evaporator. The evaporator then works as a cross-flow heat exchanger, cooling air that is passed through the heat exchanger fins by an A/C fan and finally blown through and into the cabin

The evaporator sits right behind your dashboard, with fans blowing air through this heat exchanger, up the vents and into the cabin
The evaporator sits right behind your dashboard, with fans blowing air…

One downside of air conditioning is that the temperature of the air entering the cabin is completely dependent on the ambient air temperature outside. The evaporator can only produce a certain rate of heat exchange, meaning that you will be adjusting your A/C dials to keep the cabin at your desired temperature.

This makes air conditioning an open-loop system in engineering terms, meaning that it endlessly takes an input, applies a process (like heating or cooling) and then produces an output from that process. Changes to an open-loop system have to be made manually, like having to adjust the knobs on the dashboard to the red or blue areas to search for the exact temperature that you want.

How is climate control different?

How Do Climate Control And Air Conditioning Systems Actually Work?

Climate control takes air conditioning and does away with the guessing game of temperature change. Just as its name suggests, it allows you to accurately dictate the exact temperature of the air entering the cabin, even to half-degree increments. It is effectively air-conditioning, but with a brain.

This is accomplished using a feedback loop or closed loop control system. This means that the output from the system is translated into some form of information and sent back as feedback to the input controller so that adjustments can be made. So if you set your climate control at 17 degrees centigrade, the climate control will form a feedback loop in order to keep the cabin at that temperature.

How Do Climate Control And Air Conditioning Systems Actually Work?

It does this by controlling fairly simple aspects of the air conditioning system, like fan speed. If the feedback loop realises that the ambient temperature is warming up slightly, the input control will increase fan speed, thus allowing a faster rate of cooling air into the cabin. This means that the effect the A/C evaporator is having on the refrigerant can be controlled to increase or decrease, thus allowing an accurate control of air temperature.

More advanced systems use sunlight detectors on the dashboard to predetermine the amount of heat that will be entering the car through solar radiation. If large amounts of sunlight are detected, the controller will increase A/C in preparation, reducing any form of lag within the heat-exchanging process.

The most common fault in an A/C or climate control system is when the receiver drier packs in, causing the system to clog up with moisture
The most common fault in an A/C or climate control system is when the…

Climate control effectively means that – if you live in a stable climate – you may only need to set the cabin temperature once, leaving the on-board computer to do the work and keep the cabin at the desired temperature. Most cars these days will come with air conditioning as standard, with climate control being an optional extra or standard on more expensive models.

Although to be honest, a standard heater is all we really ever need in the UK, seeing as the ambient air around here is generally nice and cool in the first place! Air conditioning itself can be a nuisance when it comes to servicing too, with re-gassing being a common occurrence once a car reaches a certain age. So next time you head down to spec your latest pride-and-joy, will you pay up for climate control or stick with good old standard A/C?

Comment below with your thoughts!

Comments

Anonymous

I couldn’t imaging my life without climate control

09/14/2016 - 16:02 |
0 | 0
faisal3398 فيصل (Crown Vic)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I couldn’t imagine holding my steering wheel without A/C.

09/14/2016 - 16:35 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

My 18 year old volvo has climate control

09/14/2016 - 16:32 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

My scion iM came with dual zone climate control standard. I’ve had the temperature set at 74F since i got the car and never touch it, it’s freaking awesome coming from a car that had no A/C (even though i removed it myself cz racecar)

09/14/2016 - 16:40 |
0 | 0
Ben Anderson 1

This article can be summed up in one line.

It uses a Thermistor.

(no really, that’s all climate control really is)

09/14/2016 - 17:27 |
4 | 0
GTConas

Turbo butons?!?!? Again?

09/14/2016 - 17:56 |
0 | 0
Lamborghini Murcielago Longitudinale Posteriore 670-4 Electr
09/14/2016 - 18:05 |
10 | 0
Anonymous

II feel you man. I live in Arizona. Iv’e burned my hand on practically everything in the car… Including the knob to turn the climate control on.

09/14/2016 - 20:22 |
2 | 0
DL🏁

To be honest, I wouldn’t mind a climate control unit in my car, but I don’t see much point in dual-zone (or quad-zone) climate control.
Has anyone ever checked whether the temperature set is different in each part of the car?
Like on the picture of the Jaguar in the post, there are two temperature knobs. So if I was to set it to 18 degrees and my passenger to 22 degrees, would we actually get these temperatures?
I’m sure its going to be somewhere in the middle (20 degrees or so) in the whole cabin, because… well, physics
Or am I wrong?

09/14/2016 - 23:46 |
16 | 0

I got downvoted :( ok

09/15/2016 - 05:09 |
2 | 0

I’m not too sure. My car has dual zone and for funs, I put one side to max cold and the other side to max hot, and the temp coming out of both vents was correct, but the temp of the car was very odd. I was sitting on the cold side, being blasted with cold air but my right side was warm from the hot air coming out those vents. Very strange feeling. Not sure what the cabin temp was overall.

09/15/2016 - 07:49 |
0 | 0
jackson litz

If anyone lives in North Alabama, y’all know what it’s like to have to go to school in a jacket, and then be sweating by the time you walk home.

09/16/2016 - 17:09 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

What is the diffrence between bitturbo and twinturbo?

09/19/2016 - 09:11 |
0 | 0

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