danieltoye101@msn.com
Been here awhile...
I've always taken "recirulation" for granted to cool your cabin the quickest. I remember cars in the 70's had knobs labeled 'A/C" and "Hi A/C" which I believe is now more commonly known as "recirulation"
The reason the recirculate function causes the car to cool in its fastest manner was clearly described on "Cartalk" on NPR in a manner even I understand.
In net: Best practice to get fastest cooling is to start off in Recirculate mode, and switch to normal mode once the car is cool.
One last thing, every so often, run your hand over the rear center vent to make sure it is putting out COLD air and not HOT air. For some reason, the hot/cold control on mine sometimes goes to hot, without me touching it. That control is a seperate control, that has nothing to do with the dashboard controls. I keep saying that I'm going to tape my rear central control to cold, or even jam it in the cold position with a piece of cardboard, but I have not done it yet. I just reach back and if it is coming out warm/hot, I just move the control down to cold.
A coworker has a G35 coupe and I've learned to aim the dash vents away from me when he first fires up the A/C. It takes about 10 seconds for his car to quit blasting really hot air and provide chilled air. Pretty typical in my experience; most cars need a few seconds to get chilled air of some sort. My late-80s vintage other cars, with black leather interiors, blast warm air for about 5 seconds as well. The a/c controller on those cars though has some smarts; it keeps the fan speed down until its own temp sensor says the a/c evaporator is actually chilling the air... then it jumps the fan full speed.It doesn't really matter what gyrations you need to go through to get acceptable cooling - this is a $40K car and the a/c should not be an issue - period.
When I park my Genesis outside in 85 - 90 degree temps, it blowing very hot air for the first couple of minutes, even when it's set to "recycle". This was NOT true for my TL or my G35. The interior of both those cars was darker than my Genesis's, but they cooled off much quicker.
My a/c has been the only major disappointment with my Genesis. If the outside temp is in the low 80's, the a/c is fine. Anything above that and it takes a minimum of 45 seconds before it stops blowing hot air & begins to blow cool air. I have tried every trick - turn off the "auto" & run it manually, shut the rear vents, make sure the rear vents are at their lowest setting - nothing seems to work. BUT....
...I just traded (long story) my 2009 4.6 for a 2010 3.8. I'm dying to see if I have the same problem with the newer car.