Where is the air conditioning filter of Haima Premacy located?
2 Answers
Haima Premacy air conditioning filter: The air conditioning filter of this model is located behind the glove box, which needs to be removed for access. Generally speaking, the replacement interval of the car air conditioning filter depends on the usage conditions. For urban family cars, it is usually replaced every six months or once a year. More detailed information is as follows: 1. When the car is driving with the air conditioning on, it inhales external air into the cabin. However, the air contains various particles such as dust, pollen, soot, grinding particles, ozone, odors, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide, benzene, etc. 2. Without the air conditioning filter, these particles can enter the cabin, not only polluting the car's air conditioning and reducing the performance of the cooling system but also causing allergic reactions, lung damage, and irritation from ozone, affecting driving safety. A high-quality air filter can absorb fine particles, reduce respiratory pain, minimize irritation to allergy sufferers, enhance driving comfort, and protect the air conditioning cooling system. There are two types of air conditioning filters: one without activated carbon and another containing activated carbon (please confirm before purchasing). The activated carbon filter not only has the above functions but also absorbs a large amount of odors. The general replacement cycle for an air conditioning filter is every 10,000 kilometers.
After repairing cars for so many years, I've handled quite a few Haima Premacy models. The cabin air filter is usually located inside the glove compartment on the passenger side. To be specific, there's a small compartment or drawer-style design at the rear of the glove box. To access it, you'll need to empty the glove compartment, then push it inward to the deepest position where you'll find a plastic cover or latch mechanism. Gently pry open or press the latch to remove the filter housing for replacement. I do this job frequently because accumulated dust in an unchanged filter can cause odors and affect cabin air quality, which is especially troublesome for allergy sufferers. I recommend checking it every six months or 10,000 km. Most vehicles with similar positioning follow this design. If you can't find the details, consulting the owner's manual or online video tutorials is reliable, but the location is generally fixed without major variations.