Slight vacuum leak
#1
Slight vacuum leak
1st or all, yes I have searched the forum and read all the "wild vent" threads! lol
But my problem persists. I'm in Canada, so in the winter time when it was real cold out the problem (wild vents) was pretty bad, but I replaced the 2 check valves in spring time and thought I cured the problem. Until last week went I drove at 85mph for a long time and the wild vent problem came back when ascending grades, before the engine would shift down. Driving at 60 mph the problem never surfaces. Yesterday I removed the battery and tray to check the vacuum line going to my cruise control and all is good there. C/C works fine as does my 4x4. Where else should I look, or am I not likely to find such a small leak?
But my problem persists. I'm in Canada, so in the winter time when it was real cold out the problem (wild vents) was pretty bad, but I replaced the 2 check valves in spring time and thought I cured the problem. Until last week went I drove at 85mph for a long time and the wild vent problem came back when ascending grades, before the engine would shift down. Driving at 60 mph the problem never surfaces. Yesterday I removed the battery and tray to check the vacuum line going to my cruise control and all is good there. C/C works fine as does my 4x4. Where else should I look, or am I not likely to find such a small leak?
#2
1st or all, yes I have searched the forum and read all the "wild vent" threads! lol
But my problem persists. I'm in Canada, so in the winter time when it was real cold out the problem (wild vents) was pretty bad, but I replaced the 2 check valves in spring time and thought I cured the problem. Until last week went I drove at 85mph for a long time and the wild vent problem came back when ascending grades, before the engine would shift down. Driving at 60 mph the problem never surfaces. Yesterday I removed the battery and tray to check the vacuum line going to my cruise control and all is good there. C/C works fine as does my 4x4. Where else should I look, or am I not likely to find such a small leak?
But my problem persists. I'm in Canada, so in the winter time when it was real cold out the problem (wild vents) was pretty bad, but I replaced the 2 check valves in spring time and thought I cured the problem. Until last week went I drove at 85mph for a long time and the wild vent problem came back when ascending grades, before the engine would shift down. Driving at 60 mph the problem never surfaces. Yesterday I removed the battery and tray to check the vacuum line going to my cruise control and all is good there. C/C works fine as does my 4x4. Where else should I look, or am I not likely to find such a small leak?
#3
Wild Vents then Broken Vents fix
I had the wild vents problem for a while, then the vents COMPLETELY stopped working. I could only turn on the defroster, or OFF. That is to say, no mattery which position I put the selector swtich in, it activated the defroster vents.
I just fixed it, after many hours of going through vacuum lines. Frustrating, all my check valves were operational, and the only leak I found was a disintegrated elbow-connector in the vacuum line under the battery (connects to the cruise control canister, I believe). Fixing this did not fix the problem though.
What was it? A LOOSE vacuum connector (multiple-line connector). The white connector behind the dash panel, that goes from the selector switch to the vacuum lines that pass through the firewall. (yes, those are vacuum lines, not electrical wires! It took me a while to realize that! ) I just unplugged the connector, and plugged it back in (took some real SQUEEZING to get it seated properly, all those gel-connectors inside of it that form a seal around the tiny little vacuum nipples inside the connector).
Now I can select defroster, dash, or floor vent. I don't know if the 'wild vents' problem is fixed though, until I drive it (that is, the problem of it changing vents while driving uphill).
I have a 2000 Dodge Ram 1500 Van. 5.2L engine V8.
I just fixed it, after many hours of going through vacuum lines. Frustrating, all my check valves were operational, and the only leak I found was a disintegrated elbow-connector in the vacuum line under the battery (connects to the cruise control canister, I believe). Fixing this did not fix the problem though.
What was it? A LOOSE vacuum connector (multiple-line connector). The white connector behind the dash panel, that goes from the selector switch to the vacuum lines that pass through the firewall. (yes, those are vacuum lines, not electrical wires! It took me a while to realize that! ) I just unplugged the connector, and plugged it back in (took some real SQUEEZING to get it seated properly, all those gel-connectors inside of it that form a seal around the tiny little vacuum nipples inside the connector).
Now I can select defroster, dash, or floor vent. I don't know if the 'wild vents' problem is fixed though, until I drive it (that is, the problem of it changing vents while driving uphill).
I have a 2000 Dodge Ram 1500 Van. 5.2L engine V8.