does anyone have a pic of the inside of a compressor ?? They are sealed in oil correct ?? So how does the "refrigerant" travel through the compressor itself or is it in a gas state while inside the compressor? I do understand from a more simple standpoint that as the liquid (what I remember as and what used to be called freon) would take the "heat" out of the air and become a gas, the compressor would then "compress" and make the gas hotter ?? right ?? and then be dissipated through another set of coils/fins, what have you and be cooled to a "liquid" state again, by having the heat removed, so is it the actual compression of the gas and heating it up hotter that MAKES IT TURN BACK to a liquid ?? in other words, does it have to be heated to have the ability to get "cold" again, am I making sense ?? hahahaha, And I guess without getting to technical, I have heard of older AC's with two compressors, how on earth does that work. I was working on my early 60's Gibson AC (noisier compressor) and my '56 Philco AC earlier tonight and both compressors are pretty big, the Philco being perfectly round and SUPER quiet, I mean you cannot hear this thing run at all. However, the Gibson, (oval shaped compressor) runs "louder" for sure. Carrier AC's seemed to always have noisier compressors too.