jacksmad1
Member
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- 18
- Location
- Franklin, KY
I had to replace my heater core back in the summer because my original core was leaking. It has just now gotten cold enough to start requiring heat and I soon found out I was not getting heat like so many others on the site who have replaced their original heater cores. I did not want to spend $120 or more to get my old core rebuilt so I went on a crusade to determine why I was getting no heat. I thought maybe I had an air-bubble somewhere in my system, so I bled all the air out and went through several heating and cooling cycles to make sure the system was full of coolant.
Still no heat....so then I got my infrared thermometer and measured the temperature on my crossover near the thermostat after driving for 10-15 minutes. The temp was running between 160-170 degrees, so naturally I thought my thermostat was stuck open, so I removed the thermostat and took it inside to check when it was opening in a pan of hot water. It started opening between 190-195 degrees, so the thermostat was not the issue (yes it is a hockey puck type) so I re-installed it, refilled the system, bled it, etc. So I then blocked my radiator with cardboard and tried again. The temp still only got to 160-170 degrees after a 10-15 minute drive. I checked my heater hoses temps then and the feed hose was around 160 degrees and the return hose was around 150 so hot water was getting to the heater core and there was a temperature drop on the return side. Now it was time to remove the heater box and look at what was going on.
I got my original replacement core from O'Reilly (both O'Reilly and Advance sold the exact same core). After much head scratching and comparisons I finally figured it out. Although we all know the replacement cores are made of aluminum and they are thinner, that is not the main issue. Aluminum is an excellent conductor of heat (i.e. aluminum cookware). The thickness of the core is thinner and would not have the same thermal mass or cross sectional area to exchange heat to the air, so I will give you that, but there still should be some heat.
So here is what I found. Look at the three pictures below. Picture 1 is the original heater core. Notice the left side of the core has a good seal against the board (the board represents the heater air box the core is mounted to). Now look at picture 2 of the heater core I got from O'Reilly (same as Advance had). There is a quarter inch gap between the core and the board! The air in your heater box will take the path of least resistance when going through the air box so 90+% of the air will actually go around on both sides, instead of going through the heater core and never pick up any heat!
It may be possible to block the air on the sides with foam or something but the better solution is to find a Spectra Premium heater core 94553 (I got mine from AutoZone). Look at picture 3. (Sorry I had to use a stock image, I forgot to take a picture of the new core before I installed it) The Spectra Premium core is still aluminum and about the same thickness as the core in picture 2 but it has filler panels on the sides of the core to seal it against the air box so all the air goes through the core instead of going around the core. I now have good heat in the cab even though the engine temp is still at the 160-170 degree range. The Spectra core was only around $28 bucks.
Hopefully this will help all of you have some heat without having to spend big bucks to get your old cores repaired.
Still no heat....so then I got my infrared thermometer and measured the temperature on my crossover near the thermostat after driving for 10-15 minutes. The temp was running between 160-170 degrees, so naturally I thought my thermostat was stuck open, so I removed the thermostat and took it inside to check when it was opening in a pan of hot water. It started opening between 190-195 degrees, so the thermostat was not the issue (yes it is a hockey puck type) so I re-installed it, refilled the system, bled it, etc. So I then blocked my radiator with cardboard and tried again. The temp still only got to 160-170 degrees after a 10-15 minute drive. I checked my heater hoses temps then and the feed hose was around 160 degrees and the return hose was around 150 so hot water was getting to the heater core and there was a temperature drop on the return side. Now it was time to remove the heater box and look at what was going on.
I got my original replacement core from O'Reilly (both O'Reilly and Advance sold the exact same core). After much head scratching and comparisons I finally figured it out. Although we all know the replacement cores are made of aluminum and they are thinner, that is not the main issue. Aluminum is an excellent conductor of heat (i.e. aluminum cookware). The thickness of the core is thinner and would not have the same thermal mass or cross sectional area to exchange heat to the air, so I will give you that, but there still should be some heat.
So here is what I found. Look at the three pictures below. Picture 1 is the original heater core. Notice the left side of the core has a good seal against the board (the board represents the heater air box the core is mounted to). Now look at picture 2 of the heater core I got from O'Reilly (same as Advance had). There is a quarter inch gap between the core and the board! The air in your heater box will take the path of least resistance when going through the air box so 90+% of the air will actually go around on both sides, instead of going through the heater core and never pick up any heat!
It may be possible to block the air on the sides with foam or something but the better solution is to find a Spectra Premium heater core 94553 (I got mine from AutoZone). Look at picture 3. (Sorry I had to use a stock image, I forgot to take a picture of the new core before I installed it) The Spectra Premium core is still aluminum and about the same thickness as the core in picture 2 but it has filler panels on the sides of the core to seal it against the air box so all the air goes through the core instead of going around the core. I now have good heat in the cab even though the engine temp is still at the 160-170 degree range. The Spectra core was only around $28 bucks.
Hopefully this will help all of you have some heat without having to spend big bucks to get your old cores repaired.
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