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Date:         Fri, 11 Apr 2008 10:14:12 -0700
Reply-To:     John Bange <jbange@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         John Bange <jbange@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: mystery vents
In-Reply-To:  <B93CEC77BF22AC4BAC3153499966BC53625AA4@sya01.SYA.local>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

> 1) Where does the exhaust air go from the vents on the lower > back corner of the front doors in a 1983 V'gon? The vents simply open > into the cavity of the doors behind the fibre board panel. No outlet.

The Wolfsburg engineers found that the dense air deflecting around the flat front and back along the doors of the T3 created a substantial vacuum right up front, exactly where the front edge of the door seam is. Being altogether clever by half, as VW engineers are (were?), they decided to utilize this vacuum effect to ventilate the vehicle. Cabin air is sucked in through those vents at the back of the door, through the door cavity, and out the front edge. This worked adequately, but was supposedly noisy and really only ventilated the forward cabin area. 88 and later T3's have "flow through" ventilation via exhaust ducts in the rear windows just forward of the D pillars. An additional rubber seal in the front door edge blocks the whistling vacuum egress and the rear "door vents" are blocked up, being only hole fillers. I am not certain where the air actually exited the door cavity in the early vent design. My '90 does have a painted-over sticker on the door, tucked back outside the door seal at the forward edge, up by the upper hinge that appears to be covering a hole into the door cavity. Perhaps that's where the air was formerly exhausted?

> 2) Do the holes along the bottom of the rear hatch serve any > venting or draining purpose? Or can I fill them with Great Stuff as part > of my noise insulation project?

That row of slot-shaped holes along the bottom, right? I think they're open to the interior cavity of the hatch. I'd be wary of filling them with stuff. I've never had a leak into the rear hatch cavity, but if I ever did, I'd want free flowing air to be able to dry it out! Besides, you'd probably get better soundproofing results by pulling off the hatch panel and applying soundproofing material directly.

-- John Bange '90 Vanagon - "Geldsauger"


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