Heater core?
#16
In colder climates (like western N.Y. state, where I reside) having warm defrost is more than a " creature comfort"! As I WELL KNOW! Freezing rain, and no WARM defrost becomes a safety issue!
Changing the heater core, I understand is a real pain in the ***, but if the truck is decent shape, probably well worth the effort
#17
They make two different styles of heater cores. The oem style and one with swivels on the lines. The one with the swivels are made so you don't have to completely remove the hvac box(and disconnect the ac lines). The down side is they tend to leak at the swivels. You can also cut most of the oem style lines down and just run the hoses in through the fire wall or use a piece of hose to go through it.
#18
They make two different styles of heater cores. The oem style and one with swivels on the lines. The one with the swivels are made so you don't have to completely remove the hvac box(and disconnect the ac lines). The down side is they tend to leak at the swivels. You can also cut most of the oem style lines down and just run the hoses in through the fire wall or use a piece of hose to go through it.
#20
Found some writeups where they just use hoses and clamps to attach the new core. That seems like a better place to leak than the swivels.
What brand core is best? Rockauto has only a few no-names and they don't mention swivel tubes. This will have to be a quick job for me so I'm not doing the AC lines. Either hoses attached inside or outside for me. Hmm. Napa sells the swivel but I haven't found any copper cores anywhere like OEM.
What brand core is best? Rockauto has only a few no-names and they don't mention swivel tubes. This will have to be a quick job for me so I'm not doing the AC lines. Either hoses attached inside or outside for me. Hmm. Napa sells the swivel but I haven't found any copper cores anywhere like OEM.