Seemed to work OK - today very hot - AC worked great them all of a sudden nothing - If I get it recharged - is that a waste of $$$$ - I mean if there is a leak - how easy is it to find and correct??????
Jelag,
The 42 volt thing is dead. I've got a buddy that sits on the SAE 42 Volt board. He told me it's not going to happen. Too many hurldes, for too little benefit.
... thought you might want to know.
Joe
went to an AC place and we turned it on and it worked great -(blowing 38 degree air with the outside air at 86 degrees) has been working great for the past several hours... ... what can this be?????
Your symptom is that your AC clutch hub is worn badly and the gap between the hub and armature is too big thus AC clutch does not engage.
I see this problem often with trucks that have 200K plus miles.
When the problem occurs again you can see whether the AC clutch is engaged from the top looking down at the compressor. If it is not engaged the clutch hub on front of the hub will not be turning.
If the clutch is not engaged you can check If the hube gap is causing your problem (with the engine off) by removing the AC relay and jumpering across the normally open contact. If the gap is too wide the clutch usually won't engage with the jumper alone but if you tap the clutch hub lightly it will engage.
The clutch hub is shimmed to set the gap. Often you can remove one or two of the shims and the clutch will work again.
The clutch hub is easy to remove from the under the front of the truck. Takes about 5 minutes with a 13mm 3/8 socket and 2 flat blade screwdivers. The hub is on a splined shaft with a skip. It slips right off with a screwdriver blade on each side after you remove the 13mm nut.
You can then remove the shim(s) between the clutch hub and shaft collar. You'll need to line up the skip in the splined shaft to re-install the plate.
Even with a a worn AC clutch hub you can usually get another season or two by removing shim.