| strat61caster |
08-15-2014 11:49 AM |
Here's why:
The air conditioning needs power to operate, it gets that power by utilizing the engine under your hood. However it doesn't need power all the time so some of the time it's disconnected from the engine, sometimes it's connected and spinning if you ask for it (hit the A/C button, defrost) via a clutch similar to the one in a car's manual transmission. In a low powered car you can feel the loss of power due to the A/C, i.e. an old 4-banger pickup or econo-box (civic/camry), however in modern cars the A/C pump will disengage under heavy acceleration so you get your powah.
In past vehicles and many more mass market consumer oriented vehicles the added load of the A/C is compensated by raising the idle rpm in a way that most people don't even notice a difference when it pops on. Toyota has decided on many vehicles that lowering the idle rpm to the lowest possible level results in better fuel economy and to suffer the consequences of having it too low to effectively be stable when the A/C is kicked on and we get this lovely idle fluctuation when we're sitting at stoplights on warm summer days.
No harm, just a bit annoying and sometimes alarming when it dips too low, several aftermarket tunes/tuners raise the idle rpm to prevent this at the cost of decreased fuel economy.
|