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2018 Chevrolet Suburban
2015 - 2019 Chevrolet Suburban
LS V8 5.3L
Compatible with more variants.
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Chevy Suburban/Silverado A/C Compressor removal Overview

Chevy Suburban/Silverado A/C Compressor removal Overview

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How to Replace the A/C Compressor on a 2015-2019 Chevrolet Suburban (R-134a System) (Trim: Premier | Engine: V8 5.3L)

Step-by-step DIY guide with required tools/parts, O-rings & PAG oil, torque specs, evacuation, and recharge tips

How to Replace the A/C Compressor on a 2015-2019 Chevrolet Suburban (R-134a System) (Trim: Premier | Engine: V8 5.3L)

Step-by-step DIY guide with required tools/parts, O-rings & PAG oil, torque specs, evacuation, and recharge tips for 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019

Orion
Orion

šŸ”§ Suburban - A/C Compressor Replacement

Replacing the A/C compressor on your Suburban involves safely recovering the refrigerant, removing the drive belt and A/C lines, swapping the compressor, then vacuuming and recharging the system. This is usually needed when the compressor is seized/noisy, leaking, or has internal failure that stops cooling.

Difficulty Level: Advanced | Estimated Time: 3-6 hours


āš ļø Safety & Precautions

  • āš ļø Refrigerant must be professionally recovered—do not vent to air (illegal and dangerous).
  • āš ļø Wear safety glasses and gloves; refrigerant/oil can cause frostbite and eye injury.
  • āš ļø Work on a cool engine; keep hands clear of the belt drive.
  • āš ļø Disconnect the negative battery cable before unplugging the compressor connector.
  • āš ļø Keep dirt out of A/C lines—cap/plug all openings immediately.

šŸ”§ Required Tools

You'll need the following tools for this repair:

  • Safety glasses
  • Nitrile gloves
  • Floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum)
  • Jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum)
  • Wheel chocks
  • 3/8" drive ratchet
  • 1/2" drive ratchet
  • 3/8" drive torque wrench (10-100 Nm range)
  • 1/2" drive torque wrench (40-200 Nm range)
  • Serpentine belt tool (long-handle) (specialty)
  • Socket set (8mm-15mm)
  • Torx bit set (T15-T30)
  • Flat-blade screwdriver
  • Trim clip removal tool
  • Line/flare-nut wrench set
  • A/C line plug/cap kit (specialty)
  • A/C manifold gauge set for R-134a (specialty)
  • Vacuum pump (A/C) (specialty)
  • Refrigerant recovery machine (specialty)
  • Refrigerant scale (specialty)

šŸ”© Required Parts

HowToo sells all the parts you need for this repair:

  • A/C compressor - Qty: 1
  • A/C compressor clutch/coil connector pigtail (if damaged) - Qty: 1
  • A/C line O-ring kit (R-134a compatible) - Qty: 1
  • PAG A/C oil (GM-approved for R-134a) - Qty: 1
  • R-134a refrigerant - Qty: Per underhood label
  • A/C accumulator/receiver-drier (recommended with compressor replacement) - Qty: 1
  • Serpentine belt (recommended if cracked/glazed) - Qty: 1

šŸ“‹ Before You Begin

  • Park on level ground, set the parking brake, and use wheel chocks.
  • Have the refrigerant recovered first using a refrigerant recovery machine (many DIYers have a shop do recover/recharge).
  • Open the hood and confirm the exact refrigerant charge amount on the underhood A/C label (you’ll recharge by weight later).
  • Disconnect the battery: use a 10mm socket to remove the negative cable and isolate it.
  • Tip: Take photos of bolt/line routing first.

šŸ”Ø Step-by-Step Instructions

Follow these steps in order:

Step 1: Recover the refrigerant (must be done first)

  • Connect the A/C manifold gauge set for R-134a to the high/low service ports.
  • Use a refrigerant recovery machine (specialty) to recover the refrigerant until the system is empty.
  • Verify both gauges read near zero before opening any A/C connection.

Step 2: Remove lower splash shields (as needed for access)

  • Raise the front safely using a floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum) and support with jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum).
  • Remove fasteners using a socket set (8mm-15mm) and trim clip removal tool.

Step 3: Remove the serpentine belt

  • Relieve belt tension using a serpentine belt tool (long-handle) (specialty).
  • Slip the belt off the A/C compressor pulley and move it aside.
  • Tip: Draw the belt routing before removal.

Step 4: Disconnect the compressor electrical connector

  • Unclip the connector using a flat-blade screwdriver (gently release the lock tab).
  • Inspect pins for corrosion or melted plastic; replace the pigtail if needed.

Step 5: Remove the A/C lines from the compressor

  • Place rags under the compressor to catch residual oil.
  • Remove the line/manifold retaining fastener(s) using a socket set (8mm-15mm) or Torx bit set (T15-T30) (varies by fitting).
  • Carefully wiggle the manifold/lines free—do not pry on aluminum lines.
  • Immediately cap/plug the open lines using an A/C line plug/cap kit (specialty).

Step 6: Remove the A/C compressor

  • Support the compressor by hand from below.
  • Remove the compressor mounting bolts using a socket set (8mm-15mm) and 1/2" drive ratchet.
  • Lower and remove the compressor from the bracket area.

Step 7: Balance the compressor oil (critical)

  • Drain the old compressor oil into a clean measuring container and note the amount (this tells you what left the system).
  • Check the new compressor: many ship with oil inside. Drain and measure it as well.
  • Add PAG oil so the new compressor has the correct amount for your system per the service information; if you’re matching what came out, add back the measured amount.
  • Tip: Too much oil reduces cooling performance.

Step 8: Install new O-rings and install the new compressor

  • Replace all disturbed A/C O-rings from your A/C line O-ring kit (R-134a compatible).
  • Lightly lubricate O-rings with clean PAG A/C oil before assembly.
  • Set the new compressor in place and start all mounting bolts by hand.
  • Tighten mounting bolts with a 3/8" drive torque wrench: Torque to 25 Nm (18 ft-lbs).

Step 9: Reinstall the A/C lines

  • Remove caps/plugs and carefully seat the manifold/lines squarely into the compressor.
  • Install the retaining fastener(s) using a socket set (8mm-15mm) or Torx bit set (T15-T30).
  • Tighten the line/manifold fastener(s) with a 3/8" drive torque wrench: Torque to 10 Nm (89 in-lbs).

Step 10: Reconnect the electrical connector and reinstall the belt

  • Reconnect the compressor connector until it clicks.
  • Reinstall the serpentine belt using the serpentine belt tool (long-handle) (specialty).
  • Visually confirm the belt is fully seated on every pulley groove.

Step 11: Reinstall splash shields and lower the vehicle

  • Reinstall shields using the socket set (8mm-15mm) and trim clip removal tool.
  • Lower the vehicle from jack stands (rated 3-ton minimum) using the floor jack (rated 3-ton minimum).

Step 12: Evacuate (vacuum) and recharge the A/C system

  • Reconnect the A/C manifold gauge set for R-134a.
  • Pull vacuum using the vacuum pump (A/C) (specialty) for at least 30–45 minutes.
  • Close valves and verify it holds vacuum (no rise) before charging; a rise suggests a leak.
  • Charge the system by weight using R-134a refrigerant and a refrigerant scale (specialty): use the exact amount on the underhood A/C label.

Step 13: Reconnect the battery

  • Reconnect the negative battery cable using a 10mm socket.

āœ… After Repair

  • Start the engine and turn A/C to MAX; confirm the compressor engages and the center vent air gets cold.
  • Check gauge readings on the A/C manifold gauge set for R-134a for normal operation (pressures vary with heat/humidity).
  • Inspect for leaks at the compressor fittings (oil residue is a common clue).
  • If cooling is weak after a correct charge, stop and diagnose—do not keep adding refrigerant.

šŸ’° DIY vs Shop Cost

Shop Cost: $1,200-$2,200 (parts + labor)

DIY Cost: $350-$900 (parts only)

You Save: $300-$1,300 by doing it yourself!

Shop labor rates vary but typically run $100-$150/hour. This repair takes a shop approximately 3-5 hours.


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Guide for A/C Compressor replace for these Chevrolet vehicles

Year Make ModelSub ModelEngineBody Style
2019 Chevrolet SuburbanLSV8 5.3L-
2019 Chevrolet SuburbanLTV8 5.3L-
2018 Chevrolet SuburbanLSV8 5.3L-
2018 Chevrolet SuburbanLTV8 5.3L-
2017 Chevrolet SuburbanLSV8 5.3L-
2017 Chevrolet SuburbanLTV8 5.3L-
2016 Chevrolet SuburbanLSV8 5.3L-
2016 Chevrolet SuburbanLTV8 5.3L-
2016 Chevrolet SuburbanLTZV8 5.3L-
2015 Chevrolet SuburbanLSV8 5.3L-
2015 Chevrolet SuburbanLTV8 5.3L-
2015 Chevrolet SuburbanLTZV8 5.3L-
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