Hello.Just joined the forums. Picked up my 2013 xlt last Friday. Still learning the vehicle but noticed the erratic idle when the heat was on the other day. today,turned the ac on to see how the controls work and noticed the same thing.there is a you tube video- "2013 explorer idle issue mp4", that shows exactly what mine is doing. haven.t found any follow ups anywhere on this. can anybody chime in? Thanks
...I will post up what the end results are with this issue.Thank you Kwasi for taking an interest,very much appreciated. Pat
Coming from a 2013 Interceptor, I know its a totally different beast, but I have 24500 miles currently and about 700 hours of idle time last I checked. I have front and rear aux. AC and I dont notice any discernible difference at idle. I run 87 octane mostly, with premium for long trips and a dash of E85 around town here and there. I changed the factory air cleaner filter at 10k miles, and run motorcraft synth. blend oil every 5500 miles regardless.
I am having the same issue with the idle when AC/heat is on. Feels like the vehicle is going to shutoff at times, I seen this before in other cars and normally it was a TPS. But since this is. 2014 XLT, with about 15,000 miles I wouldn't imagine having an issue this early.
Although I'm no expert on A/C, I would say that the reason you are not getting really cold air at idle is because the compressor isn't really engaging long enough. It looks like you have a problem there.On super hot days it seems my Ex doesn't cool as well as it should. Vent temps are cold but don't have that real "bite". My 2000 Ranger that has never had the a/c serviced has colder vent temps.
Now this is only at idle and the fans are running. It performs fine when the car is moving.
I've noticed every so often that the idle goes to crap and its due to the compressor engaging for just a 1/2 second about every 5 seconds.
Hard to say exactly without having a full manifold set attached but it looks like either a low charge, a clogged / restricted orifice, or a closed expansion valve. You really need to know what the high side is doing to get an accurate diagnosis of the problem. Since you indicated that it is random you can probably eliminate low charge as the root cause. Not that it matters much, if you have the orifice or expansion valve replaced they will evacuate the refrigerant and recharge the system to the specified amount on the label under the hood.
The RPM drop looks completely normal for an engine at idle being put under load by the compressor. I would suspect you have the issue at road speeds as well it is just that you cant really tell because your RPM's are higher.