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Heater doesn't get very hot
Another heater thread I guess. My 87 heater seems to have lost a lot of its functionality. The truck has to have been warmed up all the way for at least 15 minutes before the heater will barely start to work. It always had a good heater up until this winter.
I made sure its full of fluid, and it seems to be. I did just replace the radiator, but I drove it several times and filled it up each time it sucked more fluid down. So there should be plenty of fluid. I think there can be air in there, but I'm not real sure how to tell if that's my problem. Once the truck has been running for about 20 minutes, the heater will finally start to blow somewhat warm, but it never really blows hot like you'd want it to. There is no leaking going on in the cab floor. If it is the heater core somehow, are they difficult to replace in these trucks? |
Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
What does your gauge read? Have you checked the thermostat for proper operation? Sounds like it's stuck open.
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
If you just replaced the radiator and sure that there are no air bubbles in the system, next thing I would do is to check the thermostat and make sure there is not a blockage. With the new rad. you might have better flow and have loosened up some calcium and blocked the core and thermostat. Back flush the core and make sure the stat is no plugged before you over heat and blow a gasket.
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
Check both heater hoses coming out of the cab,once the engine is warm they should both be hot to the touch.Heater core is pretty easy on these trucks too..
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
Or you may just be cooling so much better with the new radiator that the engine never gets up to temp. Thermostats have a bleed, so they always flow a little bit. My truck won't warm up to temp in the winter, even with an electric fan that doesn't run unless it is up to temp, unless I block off the grill.
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
what is your rad mix?
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
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As for the temps, they hover around the 177 area. Thermostat was replaced when the radiator was, with a 185 degree thermostat. The gauge is a digital gauge so I can see exactly when the thermostat opens if I'm watching. It will go up to about 191 and then drop really fast all the way back down to 175. If you watch you can see each time it opens, though it varies from the first time when you start up the truck. Once its warm it isn't so predictable. |
Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
I don't have the book for 1987, but the 1973-1978 parts book specifies 195* thermostat for all engines -- six, V8, and diesel -- from 1973 through 1978.
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
Yeah I'm not real sure what it was supposed to be so I just replaced it with what came out of there. Can that 10* difference affect the heater?
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
10 degrees more is 10 degrees more everywhere in the water jacket, so yeah, it makes a difference. It will also make a positive difference in power and gas mileage.
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
Blend door not opening all the way? Bad vacuum actuator? Just guessing, as usual.
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
Being fuel injected it would need a 195.
I just worked on my vans heater. The core was clogged, I had to flush it backwards and forwards until it finally cleared. Blows hot now. |
Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
Seems like a whole lot of things could potentially be wrong. Might just take this one to my mechanic. He has a tendency to diagnose things in 10 min that take me hours if not days.
I might can back flush the core, that sounds easy enough. I'm assuming you just plug the water hose into the lower heater hose and unhook the upper one? |
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Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
The last heater problem I fixed, the guy had both hoses hooked to the low-pressure side of the water pump. He had very little flow, and thus got very little heat.
Once we hooked up the hoses properly, it cooked him out of the cab. It gives you yet another possible solution to investigate. Also, whenever I back-flushed anything, I spent $12 on some PVC fittings at the local hardware store, and made a fixture to attach both a water hose and a air nozzle. When I flush with water, I give it some shots of air as well to "shock" the water passages and help knock stuff loose. |
Re: Heater doesn't get very hot
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