![]() |
Register or Log In To remove these advertisements. |
|
|
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
#1 |
|
Senior Member
![]() Join Date: Jan 2025
Location: Arizona in a van down by the river
Posts: 617
|
My AC is now cooler - a tale of sucking and blowing
I realize I’ve already got another thread about R134a, but I felt compelled to share my woeful tale of falling headfirst into the AC rabbit hole. Maybe this can spare someone else a few hours of misery — or at least provide a hearty laugh at my expense.
It all began innocently enough. One evening, bourbon in hand, I was flipping through the packet of paperwork that came with my truck. I stumbled on a note saying it had been converted to R134a, with a new compressor and various other bits. “Aha!” I thought. “All it probably needs is a quick recharge and we’ll be blowing ice cubes in no time.” Unfortunately, reality disagreed. I slapped a low-pressure gauge on the low side. It showed a charge. That brief moment of triumph was immediately interrupted by the discovery that my blend doors weren’t moving or changing like they should. Down the hole I went. On the advice of someone here, I started poking at the vacuum system — valves, doors, reservoir, check valves, the whole spaghetti mess. Manifold vacuum to the reservoir ball looked great. Encouraged, I began unplugging vacuum “pods” that control the fresh air and blend functions, along with the heater bypass valve. To condense the chaos: I eventually discovered that the fresh-air vacuum pod on the firewall was robbing vacuum from the heater bypass. If I unplugged the fresh-air pod and capped the T, suddenly the heater bypass would close properly. Victory! I unplugged the kick-panel pod too, because by default it was opening and letting warm air creep in like an unwanted houseguest. The blend valve inside the dash still doesn’t work, and I still can’t get the defrost vents to switch over, which I’m blaming on that same under-dash vacuum contraption. However, I did manage to achieve cool air, plus the ability to select heat — which is good enough for Arizona survival standards. The big takeaway is that the vacuum system on these trucks isn’t terribly complex, but when one piece quits, it can make the rest act like a Greek tragedy. Next on the agenda is adding a can of refrigerant to see if I can coax a bit more cold out of it, and possibly getting the POA valve tuned for R134a. Questions welcome, clarifications available, and bourbon optional. The AC rabbit hole is deep, but at least it’s cooler down here than it was.
__________________
1972 C10 Custom Deluxe Highlander 402 Freedom isn't safe, it requires you to take responsibility for your own life, your own safety, and your own success. It carries with it the possibility of failure and the understanding that you're working without out a safety net. If you give the state the responsibility for any of these you also give up the freedom that accompanies the responsibility. |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
|
|