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Dodge Dakota Climate Control
redhead777
Member Posts: 2
I have a 1998 Dodge Dakota Sport club cab 4X4 V8 5 speed. It's a great truck but my A/C has died. I need my A/C it's way too hot here and I HATE to be hot. I have had the motor replaced, I have had the system recharged, I have had the dye put in to check for leaks TWICE, I have had all of the connections re-done and gaskets replaced. The dash board has been removed and we have found NOTHING WRONG except it blows HOT AIR. HELP!!!! I don't know what else it could be and the A/C specialist is baffled. If you know a solution your help would be MUCH APPRECIATED! Thanks in advance!
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Ron35
Ron35
I am not a A/C specialist. I am a Master Electrican with 30 plus years in the trade and I do not answer electrical questions on a truck forum. I was probably of no help to you, but just had to respond.
It worked for a couple of days after he changed everything but that's all.
On the passenger side of the vehicle there is a drain hose that drains off any excess water,this is usually where the water you see dripping in the summer time is coming from.Locate the hose and run a coat hanger or something up in it easily.They can become clogged with a moldy type substance and this will restrict the drainage.You will have to look to find it.It should be aroung the passenger side firewall.
My truck needs the evaporator core replaced. I took it to the mechanic and he quoted me about $500. I know for some this amount of money may sound expensive,but I have been reading about this topic in WWW.DODGEDAKOTAS.COM and it seems that the price I was quoted is pretty reasonable.
Being so handy at pretty much everything,including working on my own cars, here is the dollar million questions?
Do you think I should replace evaporator core myself?
Some members at www.dodgedakotas.com suggested that replacing the evaporator is not an easy job. Other members suggested that replacing the evaporator core can be done if all the necessary steps are taken.
Since I live in Michigan, we only have one more month of warm weather before things start to cool off a little. I was thinking of replacing the evaporator myself before the summer season ends or wait until next year and paid the pros to do it for me.
As always, your opinion, suggestions and advice will always be greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Handymex
The evaporator core on my 1996 Dodge Dakota needs to be replace. Because the amount of money mechanics charge to do this type of job, I want to replace the eveaporator core myself.
Some people say that when it comes with evaporator cores only the pros should deal with them. Again, because of the price of this job, I want to do it myself.
Does anyone have a step by step guide that can share with me for this kind of job. Recently I found a how to remove the eveporator core step by step guide,but I think it was written for a newer model Dodge Dakota.
Your help on this subject will alwasy be greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Handymex :confuse:
HINT: If fan only runs on high - replace the blower resistor. (This "fix" holds true for any automobile on the planet)
His fan only works on High won't work at the other speeds. He does get heat.
I need help locating the blower motor.
Is it in the engine compartment or inside the truck?
I have read there is a resistor that may be bad.
Where would I find this resistor? Is it attached to the blower motor or is it in the fuse box.
Last am I on the right track or is it something else.
Please thanks for the help.
Search for "blower motor resistor" in the archives and you will find all the details.
The Part was about $12 bucks and took 10 minutes to replace.
Joe
Regards,
Dusty
blower motor resistor is locate please.inside or underneath the hood please.
HINT: It is behind the glovebox.
If clutch is NOT cycling, then focus on why it is not.
I have a 2000 Dodge Dakota 3.9L. Recently I started hearing this squealing noise intermittently (like metal on metal grinding). Shortly after that my A/C quit putting out cold air so I obviously figured it to be my compressor. Due to time constraints I attempted to get a belt without A/C to bypass the compressor. To my displeasure, the belt doesn't seem to fit as I've fought with it for 2 hours and came no where near getting the belt on. We'll the good news is, when I pulled the original belt off I was able to mess with the A/C compressor pully and sure enough, it's hopping around on the "spindle" so obviously the bearings or whatever is in there is bunk. My question is this, can I replace the pully or whatever it is by itself or do I need to replace the entire compressor? If I can, is it fairly easy or am I better off taking it to a mechanic? Obviously I'm a novice (amateur really) but I am a helicopter mechanic so I can usually do auto repair with the right instruction. I'd prefer to do it myself for experience sake but I don't want to spend all day fixing it. Thanks for your time and any help is greatly appreciated. Ciao!
Any help would be greatly appreciated. It is HUMID! in chicago.
Have a great day.
Freon added again with leak sealer added (hail mary). Good for one week. Probably the evaporator?
Any recommendations on other checks or cost or replacing evaporator. (I know it's behind the dash and a big job)
Thanks.
Ron
Any help will be appreciated.
As a band aid I crammed 2 pieces of .032" stainless steel safety in the bad terminal and all speeds work fine for now. This might keep working until Tuesday when the new plug is supposed to be here.
There are five wires going to the Blower Resistor. Two of them on the very end of the connector are larger gauge wire. What you will typically see is that the end pin in the connector shows signs of copper corrosion. If you inspect the two heavy gauge terminals you will see that some of the stands are broken.
I believe that as the wire deteriorates at the terminal crimp, conductance loss causes the terminal in the connector to over heat. Hence the melted plastic from the resistor pack usually drips down into the mating connector and causes further intermittent connection problems.
Chrysler has a repair kit issued (5017124-AA), but to my eye the large wires supplied in the kit are not the same gauge as the two heavy wires in the harness connector. I've seen this repair last about a year, then the same thing happens again. I'm hoping that by now they have a better fix. Mine is starting to loose the fan intermittently ( '03, 85,000 miles).
Best regards,
Dusty
That is the part # for the repair kit they sold me. It came 2 different wire sizes. I will be sure to use the larger wires. How do you get the connector apart to put the new terminals in the new connector?
Thanks