RE: Help with dead A/C and green fluid leak?
Okay, hard to see alot here, but the 'type' of fluid think might be easy.
Your car should be running R134 as the 'coolant' for the AC. This stuff is dyed, the stuff I had was bright green in color, and has sort of a 'sappy' type consistance. Given that your AC just blew, I say odds are this is it.
The other fluids that are green in color are the coolant/antifreeze. Basically a little thicker than water. Looks alot like your pictures, but if this is the case.. I'd expect the temperature guage to maybe go on once the car looses enough fluid to become a problem, the warning light for coolant level should come on if it leaks more too. Watch the temp guage to make sure its still okay. You could drive 10 miles on a cold car with a small coolant leak, providing that u can top it up before you left.
Hydralic fluid.. I guess that possible, but kinda unlikely. That fluid is usually red or somelikes clear/pale blue. It oil, so it looks like oil and feel like it too. The only thing that runs this fluid is power steering, and I guess a Hydralic clutch if you got a standard. Again.. 10 miles is not a big deal to drive on it.. The power steering pump will really whine if its low, and not a good thing to run them without oil.
At this point, I'd lay money that the fluid is AC coolant (R134).
Hmm.. a knock from the engine compartment... Not sure, could be.. could have maybe been a 'pop' indicating a line blew. The AC would run till the low pressure sensor in the system shut down the pump (time depends on leak size, but likely 30sec to minute). You would have residual cooling in the evaporator that would allow cold air to blow for a few mins. Would the enghine change.. yes you might notice the car has bit more power.. AC under full load can take 5-10 horse power.
Is there a link between a hydralic system and the AC. Nope. Only the belt is common, should be a single belt driving most every thing, but trust me.. if the fan belt blew.. You know.. every light on the cars dash generally comes on.
I assume the day was a hot , google says today was high 70's for Cincinnati (thats a cool day for AC though).. Really hot days put alot of pressure on an AC system.. pressure can hit 180-250 PSI. Can cause a weak line to blow, esp given you have a new pump put in last year you said.
Hood Release: I am guessing the issue is more with the cable inside the engine compartment. If this is the case. I know no way to release it. My Benz did this once.. was a pain. I ended up removing the skid plate/road cover.. reaching up and releasing the cable manually. Maybe the other Audi guys know how to do it.
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