79jasper
Chickenhawk
Personally, I would change it.
But I would have to say blend door also.
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But I would have to say blend door also.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk
Is this how yours is set up right now? If yes then you got it right. Tho like Riot said the core itself doesn't care which of its ports is inlet and which is outlet, on the same truck we've had it both ways depending on how the hoses routed better and I can assure the truck may have 99 problems but lack of heat sure as heck ain't oneYou must be registered for see images attach
Just not sure to switch it or leave it or if it makes a difference odd?
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Just not sure to switch it or leave it or if it makes a difference odd?
Fixnstuff, I think Eric's concern wasn't so much whether to switch his bypass to full flow, but rather which port of the heater core is inlet and which is outlet. Which should never be a concern on these trucks, since the ports are the same size and so are all hoses - route them any which way works best for you, as long as one is in and one is out and the core is clean internally there will be plenty of heat coming out the vents. And if too much hear is coming out without the engine actually overheating, then the issue is not in the coolant loop but rather the blend door - likely the cable sheathing has slipped in its clamp and thus changed the end position of the blend door, it's an easy fix once the glove box has been swung down out of the way.
Sooooo here is a question guys I notice that my lines are opposite of this routing. Looking at the truck the far right hose goes to my water pump and the left outlet goes to my block?? This shows opposite of what someone did on mine? Would this explain why my truck always blows hot air or is it maybe right?
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The coolant filter is used in a bypass mode- parallel to the return hose. Use two Tee's on the return side hose, the filter gets plumbed in between the two Tee's. The filter head should show an IN and an OUT flow arrow or text, the IN side connects to the Tee closest to the firewall..![]()
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Blows hot cause blend door not functioning is my best guess
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Regarding your project with the heater core shutoff - what works against you is that your 87 has full mechanical HVAC doors control, both the 86-down and the 89-up models use vacuum servos and so running a 4-port valve with a vacuum can T-eed into the fresh air door vacuum line is the standard practice, but obviously you can't do that. What you can do is use a 4-port valve that is cable actuated, and hook that up to the recirculating door lever - when the door is closed so is the heater core for max A/C effect. The one thing I don't like about this setup is the same thing I don't like about the vacuum T-ee - sometimes it's nice to have the door closed AND the heat running full blast, if the bypass valve is slaved to the door actuator that's impossible to accomplish.
Of course most folks have no issue with that cause from the factory the fresh air door is closed only on the "max a/c" setting (well, and "off"), but for trucks like yours where the door is manually controlled you could do the "max heat" trick easily.
And I wouldn't wast time on a variable coolant flow setup - make it a simple on/off instead, cause when it's fully on you can still vary your vents temperature via the blend door anyways.
Also a heads-up, I'd highly recommend that you do NOT use the aftermarket replacement diverter valves you can get from the parts store for like $20 or so, they are very hit or miss things as far as quality goes.
I intend to show good technical reasoning and explanations why not to install the filter in-line with a heater core hose.
Thanks guys the diagram I posted was one I found online. Mine however is reversed at the heater core section that's what was scaring me when I saw it and had me like wow. I just was not sure if the heater core it's self was a in and our design.