remarkablemagic
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So I have a '92 Sunbird SE and it runs good but it's a convertible and just a clunker, but it REALLY needs heat. When I got it the hoses were connected bypassing the heater entirely. So I get a new heater core and have it installed and still no heat!
It does blow just barely lukewarm air now. It seems as if the vents are working right, I mean you get a click when you change the positions and it diverts air where you tell it to go (floor when on "heat", window when on "defrost", etc..), and it also definitely diverts air from a different place when you move the slider from hot to cold.
I have also replaced the thermostat so there is no problem there either. This one I didn't do (I do a lot of my own work but I have a friend who, when I fix his computers, fixes my cars in lieu of payment), but my friend says he saw no sign of crud or lack of flow when he took the two hoses apart.
The only thing that makes any sense, but still also sounds hokey to me, is the guy at the auto parts store said somewhere in the system is a valve that can block the water from entering the heater core? I'd never heard of this, and there seems to be no mention of it at all in the Haynes manual. Is there such a valve? He said it would either be cable operated or perhaps vacuum operated. In any case, if said valve does exist it certainly could be closed, but does it, and if so where is it?
Failing some kind of valve, the only last resort I can see is a full flush of the system (yes I know we should have done it at the time of replacement, but it was a need it now situation). Totally baffling to be sure,m and in a Google search and search of the forum I was unable to find any answers. I found a couple folks with the same problem, but so far as I can tell none of them solved it...
It does blow just barely lukewarm air now. It seems as if the vents are working right, I mean you get a click when you change the positions and it diverts air where you tell it to go (floor when on "heat", window when on "defrost", etc..), and it also definitely diverts air from a different place when you move the slider from hot to cold.
I have also replaced the thermostat so there is no problem there either. This one I didn't do (I do a lot of my own work but I have a friend who, when I fix his computers, fixes my cars in lieu of payment), but my friend says he saw no sign of crud or lack of flow when he took the two hoses apart.
The only thing that makes any sense, but still also sounds hokey to me, is the guy at the auto parts store said somewhere in the system is a valve that can block the water from entering the heater core? I'd never heard of this, and there seems to be no mention of it at all in the Haynes manual. Is there such a valve? He said it would either be cable operated or perhaps vacuum operated. In any case, if said valve does exist it certainly could be closed, but does it, and if so where is it?
Failing some kind of valve, the only last resort I can see is a full flush of the system (yes I know we should have done it at the time of replacement, but it was a need it now situation). Totally baffling to be sure,m and in a Google search and search of the forum I was unable to find any answers. I found a couple folks with the same problem, but so far as I can tell none of them solved it...