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Jason
07-02-2004, 10:04 AM
Had my first drive to work with AC in a long time this morning and I have to say that it cooled faster and got cooler than I expected. we'll see how long this lasts. I used it while on the highway without the aux fan working. Im afraid to try it in traffic. but the needle stayed dead center. taking it back on tues to get that checked out. If it is a resistor is that a DIY (they said it wasnt a fuse already)?

Also getting checked out on tues: had the guibo changed and now it sounds like a baseball card is stuck between the spokes of a bicycle when i drive slowly, any ideas? could it be a peice of exhaust shielding hitting something? did the exhaust not line up right when they put it back?

Regards,
Jason

ryan roopnarine
07-02-2004, 10:15 AM
sounds like a piece of heat shield hitting something, definately something that might have just been accidentally overlooked in your mech putting things back together. the resistor is definately DIY, if that is indeed the problem, all it takes is a crescent wrench or pair of pliers and knowledge
of how to bleed yer cooling system to replace.



Had my first drive to work with AC in a long time this morning and I have to say that it cooled faster and got cooler than I expected. we'll see how long this lasts. I used it while on the highway without the aux fan working. Im afraid to try it in traffic. but the needle stayed dead center. taking it back on tues to get that checked out. If it is a resistor is that a DIY (they said it wasnt a fuse already)?

Also getting checked out on tues: had the guibo changed and now it sounds like a baseball card is stuck between the spokes of a bicycle when i drive slowly, any ideas? could it be a peice of exhaust shielding hitting something? did the exhaust not line up right when they put it back?

Regards,
Jason

winfred
07-02-2004, 10:35 AM
couple screws and a couple yellow butt connectors (or solder and shrink tubing) on the resister

ryan roopnarine
07-02-2004, 10:46 AM
nevermind about the resistor, was thinking about the aux fan switch on my radiator, the one that engages the aux fan at a certain temp.

Jason
07-02-2004, 11:09 AM
couple screws and a couple yellow butt connectors (or solder and shrink tubing) on the resister

winfred
07-02-2004, 11:17 AM
the resister is mounted on the lower portion of the aux fan at about 4:00, the thing that ryan was talking about is the coolent switch on the right side of the radiator, it doesn't really deal with the ac system it's more for the motor's health if the fan clutch dies