When purchased in February of 2020 my car had the original GM A6 compressor. The AC worked fine, although there was oil leaking from the front seal, a typical problem with this model compressor. I assumed the refrigerant was upgraded from R12 to R 134A because it had the quick coupling connectors on the service ports. But there were no labels stating it was a R134 conversion. During the engine upgrade I removed the compressor and condensing coil. Once I had the car back together, I evacuated and charged the system with R134. The AC worked fine, although it still had some oil around the front seal. Since I like a clean engine compartment I ran the AC very little to minimize the oil and dirt.
The ceramic seals were so prone to leaking that GM put a metal shroud around the compressor clutch on some Cadillac and Buick models. Doing some research, I found that if the car sits for long periods of time without running the AC, new seals often still weep oil. There is an aftermarket lip seal made for these compressors now that are supposed to be less prone to leaking oil. Going to car shows I have seen many cars retrofitted with a modern compressor or in some cases a complete new system such as vintage air. Other than a slight amount of oil from my compressor everything worked fine. I came across a compressor upgrade kit from Original Air / Classic Air. The kit includes a new compressor, compressor mounting bracket, accumulator, rubber lines, new O-rings and Orifice tube. I did some more research on TAC and other sites and found people didn't like the compressor mount included in this kit and recommended the Vintage air compressor mount.
Here is the Kit from Original Air / Classic Air.
IMG_3965 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
IMG_3963 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
Here is the compressor mount kit from Vintage Air.
IMG_3966 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
Here is a comparison of the original A6 compressor, top of photo and the Sanden type replacement at the bottom.
IMG_2573 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
Out of curiosity I weighed all the old compressor and associated parts compared to the new in the kit. The original compressor and parts weigh 44 lbs. versus the upgrade kit at 21 lbs. Also from what I have read the A6 compressor needs 10 - 15 horsepower to operate versus the replacement needing 2 - 5 horsepower.
So, on September 7th I ordered the Compressor upgrade kit directly from Original Air. The kit arrived October 8th. On the same day I ordered the Classic Air compressor mounting kit from Summit racing. It arrived on September 9th.
Unfortunately there were issues with Classic Air sending me the wrong compressor.
More to come!