Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2016 14:36:37 +0200
Reply-To: Raimund Feussner <ray@V6BUS.DE>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Raimund Feussner <ray@V6BUS.DE>
Subject: Re: Dimensions for A/C hoses
In-Reply-To: <CANEuo0gak6N_id-X8LeUsM39ZTwu2feBt56J-S_+HArsaNfMRw@mail.gmail.com>
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Hi Ken,
I looked at Behr, Diavia and Waeco catalogues for mechanics: seems
pretty easy to fabricate yourself if the equipment is available. But
probably not worth buying all this for just one hose set.
So I was looking to get the hoses fabricated at some typical hydraulic
shop, re-using the existing fittings.
I appreciate your offer and will come back to it, if my search here
isn´t successful.
Usually, A/C components are cheap in the US, but shipping and tax
usually ruins the whole deal...
I don´t have the foam around the valve, and the speaker out. I will have
a look.
Just had my hand in there 30min ago to get the stiff drain hose out, but
have no oil or green stuff on my hand...
Raimund
Am 26.10.2016 um 14:14 schrieb kenneth wilford (Van-Again):
> Raimund, do you want to fabricate these hoses yourself or are you looking
> for someone to make them up and send them to you? I can make custom AC
> hoses and I have most of the stock Vanagon hoses sitting here on the shelf
> to use as guides to make the new ones. Let me know if you would like me to
> price out making up new hoses for you and shipping them to Germany. They
> would all be brand new barrier style hoses suitable for R134a of course.
>
> As for your leak, I would suspect the expansion valve as they have an end
> piece that is epoxied in place (steel piece in an aluminum block) and over
> time the epoxy can start to fail causing a leak in a place that is hard to
> see unless you drop the rear unit.
>
> Ken
>
> PS Very soon we should have quality reproduction rear AC Evaporators
> available for the passenger Vanagon (I can also have new Westy Evaporators
> made up if there is interest).
>
> Ken
>
> On Wed, Oct 26, 2016 at 4:26 AM, Raimund Feussner <ray@v6bus.de> wrote:
>
>> Hello Group!
>>
>>
>> After retrofitting the factory ´87 tintop A/C in my ´92 Vanagon in 2004,
>> it seems it finally needs new hoses.
>> Refrigerant keeps disappearing quicker and quicker...
>>
>> I re-used the stock ´87 hoses back then, and also the R12 expansion
>> valve (working with R134a since the retrofit).
>> For several reasons, I need to drop the evaporator anyway, so I think
>> this is my best chance to replace all the old stuff including the
>> expansion valve.
>>
>> Does anyone have the information about hose lengths, position of
>> pressure sensors etc on paper?
>> I want to get some quotes from hose suppliers, but don´t want to pull my
>> hoses out upfront, just to learn it´s too expensive.
>>
>> I would prefer the later style hoses, with the trinary pressure switch
>> instead the separate hi/low switches.
>> I like to check the A/C myself as much as possible, and might need to
>> remove the switch without losing refrigerant.
>>
>> Thanks for any help,
>> I am struggling to get this information in Germany, as A/C are rare and
>> servicing extremely expensive.
>> A/C shops keep selling their services as some kind of magic still...
>>
>> History:
>> In 2009, got the system filled by a shop, nice cooling effect.
>> In 2014, system didn´t cool well, I added R134a via Walmart-style
>> re-fill kit (12oz can and gauge).
>> In 2016, system cooled okay´ish in the beginning, but faded quickly in
>> the summer, now not even activating the compressor.
>> Bridged the low pressure switch, compressor kicked in, but no effective
>> cooling after a few minutes idling. No green leak detection fluid can be
>> seen (only visual check at accessible areas without U/V light, no check
>> in evap housing or detailed condenser check).
>>
>>
>> Regards
>> Raimund
>>
>
>
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