How to turn your heater core off and on in the cab.
05-18-2019, (Subject: How to turn your heater core off and on in the cab. ) 
Post: #14
RE: How to turn your heater core off and on in the cab.
(05-18-2019 )smorgan87 Wrote:  Thats prty cool waterloo. I hadnt thought about the solonoids having a short duty cycle. That ball valve popped up on my amazin this morning. May have to try that one day. What all have u changed on ur ac system?

You had to ask, LOL! I hope you are sitting down... Here is my short rundown.

The one thing I did that made the system functional was to dig that ambient air temp sensor out from under the radiator and get it up into the fresh air up by the mirror. When that sensor was able to read a more correct temp, is when I was actually able to get cold air in the cab on a warm day. Prior to that, there was no cold air, or very sporadic.

There was also a TSB for a new harness to be installed at the blower motor, it has an inline resistor to tamp down the amperage needed to run the blower motor. It was not uncommon to replace the 30 amp fuse in the dash for the blower motor on a bi-weekly basis, as it simply melted in the fuse block. The new harness solved that issue, but the fan still overheats occasionally and has to be manually unplugged so that it resets itself. A real PIA. I still cannot run the blower motor on its highest setting, as it will burn up in the dash. I have installed close to a dozen blower motors that fried on me. Bench tested them all, dealer covered a few under warranty.

I've replaced the HVAC control module several times too, as they were failing left and right for some reason. I went through four or five of those, at $300 a pop. Warranty covered all but two.

I also went through ALL of the wiring associated with the HVAC system under the dash, if anything looked questionable it was replaced. The only thing I have yet to do is remove the entire HVAC box under the dash and hood to replace. I don't see a need for that this year. LOL.

No dye in the system either, just PAG oil and refrigerant. The dye in the system shuts it right down and it will not function. Been through that nightmare more than a few times, before I learned how to work on my AC system.

One thing I did discover is that the expansion valve needs to be an OEM unit, the aftermarket ones will not work properly with the AC compressor and the results are catastrophic. The compressor will fail. So only OEM expansion valves, the other parts, the dryer and what not, aftermarket is fine.

The high pressure switch is an item that fails on a regular basis, say every 18 months. The wiring is also very problematic to the switch, it looks like 18ga, and tends to break. I rewired that with some better wire.

Condensor up front, that has been replaced at least three times, I found that the OEM unit is the only one that fits properly, after market you are taking a chance. I have yet to see one that actually fits my truck, so I stick with the ungodly expensive OEM one.

I did just put new o rings in block going into the sleeper, found a leak, along with a new blower motor and resistor. The blower motor failed, it locked up for some reason.

As of today, the AC system works. When I installed that new ball valve, I drained the coolant system and made sure the valve was open prior to using a vacuum to refill. Everything seems to be working nicely. But we have yet to have a warm day here, so I probably will not know anything until next month.

Today, we are finishing up our new CB antenna install. I found an ingenious way to run that new coax into the cab from the mirror. I will post later, as I am sure some here will appreciate it. It is a much cleaner look than what most guys do when installing the proper antenna coax. The OEM cable fell apart in my hand at the connectors in the mirror, just shoddy quality and not reusable.
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 Thanks given by: smorgan87


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RE: How to turn your heater core off and on in the cab. - Waterloo - 05-18-2019



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