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134a is pretty cheap right now at sam's. 30 lbs for less than 90 bucks.(sell some to your freinds) after market a/c units are pretty simple. turn on switch inside the cab, see if you have power at the low pressure switch. if you are out of freon you can jump this switch with a paper clip and see if your compressor runs. is it noisy? if it runs and sounds failrly quiet you can add a little freon until it cycles on and off by itself with the low pressure switch plugged in. check for leaks. if it holds for a week, then i would have someone pull a vacume, add some oil and fill with 134a. good luck.I was literally just thinking about that. What information should I start gathering about the setup in order to start troubleshooting it??
Electrical connections
freon hoses
what else?
That is another area I have absolutely no experience in.
If you have a good air compressor and know to remove the dash pad you can blow all that stuff out. I have had military trucks with add on a/c but not with a 12v conversion. they must have mounted the compressor where the second alternator was? thanks. markIt seems as though I have the plumbing for the AC. Lines seem to be there. Wiring, I'll need to work on.
Looks as though field mice lived in vents at some point. Any way to clean those good?
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