| Greg,
|
| I can confirm there is no orifice tube if your dash AC is still stock. It
| may not be, for one never knows what has happened over the past
| twenty five
| years.
|
| These units came from factory with a thermostatic expansion valve
| instead of
| orifice tube. It is located on the evaporator and visible when
| you pull the
| front cover off the big black AC / heater box.
So much learning that my head is hurting!
Don, I didn't realize this. My '77K has a fitting on the outside of the
heater A/C box, I always assumed there was an orifice tube at that point,
right where the line enters the air box.
Since it uses a cycling clutch with high and low pressure switches, it
looked, acted like and I assumed was a CCOT (GM orifice tube) system. The
line from the receiver connects at this point to the evaporator, and it
didn't occur to me that there was yet another fitting inside the air box to
an expansion valve.
That's one area I haven't checked for leaks, but I may have a slightly loose
fitting. (I've been trying to tighten The General up for about 4 years now.
I don't really have a complaint about dash cooling, but after hearing Dick
Kennedy's re-hab job and his ready-to-frost expectations, perhaps it's time
for the air box to come apart for a little look see and a re-do.
I assume you've got a coach of the same vintage, so I've learned another new
thing today. (Number 1 was that 30 amp campground circuits are 110 volts.)
Mark
|
| I can confirm there is no orifice tube if your dash AC is still stock. It
| may not be, for one never knows what has happened over the past
| twenty five
| years.
|
| These units came from factory with a thermostatic expansion valve
| instead of
| orifice tube. It is located on the evaporator and visible when
| you pull the
| front cover off the big black AC / heater box.
So much learning that my head is hurting!
Don, I didn't realize this. My '77K has a fitting on the outside of the
heater A/C box, I always assumed there was an orifice tube at that point,
right where the line enters the air box.
Since it uses a cycling clutch with high and low pressure switches, it
looked, acted like and I assumed was a CCOT (GM orifice tube) system. The
line from the receiver connects at this point to the evaporator, and it
didn't occur to me that there was yet another fitting inside the air box to
an expansion valve.
That's one area I haven't checked for leaks, but I may have a slightly loose
fitting. (I've been trying to tighten The General up for about 4 years now.
I don't really have a complaint about dash cooling, but after hearing Dick
Kennedy's re-hab job and his ready-to-frost expectations, perhaps it's time
for the air box to come apart for a little look see and a re-do.
I assume you've got a coach of the same vintage, so I've learned another new
thing today. (Number 1 was that 30 amp campground circuits are 110 volts.)
Mark