This is not right....
Ya know, this is the kind of attitude that got Dodge and the other two Detroit makers in trouble in the 80s. They could have built better cars, they just didn't want (or have) to. Finally the imports forced them to bring up their quality. Only difference is that Ford and Chevy finally "got it", and Dodge and their newfound European leadership doesn't give a da^^ about buyer satisfaction.
DC could fix this problem... . It's not rocket science. My wife's Chrysler minivan has at least the same cabin room if not more, and the A/C in it is great. It's quiet, cold, and blows hard. DC let a bad design slip through into production, and they are not willing to fix it. Think about it; if they came out with a fix, every MegaCab in the country would be in for it. They'd lose they *****... Instead, WE lose!
my 2 1/2 cents...
Ross,
I think you've hit the proverbial nail on the head! Well said... You experienced and said the very same thing I told the service writer yesterday when I picked up my truck. I told him that our '96 caravan could freeze you out (my wife wants it 32 degrees on her side, and my side would be about 80 degrees. We'd have thunderstorms and tornados in the middle of the van where the cold and hot air mixed! She'd hang a side of beef on her side, and I'd be roasting one on my side! There has to be more cubic volume in a Grand Caravan than is in the Mega Cab. Why can't they get more air flow with less noise through this system? It's not as if we have a low powered 4 cylinder engine with a dinky compressor or condensor... We've got a large condensor coil, and a fairly good sized compressor, who knows about the evaporator (I haven't seen it), and what seems to be a blower fan from an "Easy Bake" oven that is not even marginal.
I have the same situation that you folks do after the "recalibration" of the "mode doors". That did not help it one iota. I can't see strips of cellophane moving if you hold them at the vents on the sides of the dash, and feel just a bit of air moving from the center vents with the blower on low with the A/C on and the recirculate mode is chosen. If you run the fan on the second speed setting, you will still have to have the vents turned to blow directly on you to be able to stand it at all on a 92 degree day with almost the same humidity going down the interstate at 65+MPH. I have learned to keep a towel in the door pocket so that I can wipe the sweat out of my eyes to keep from running off the road! I had thought it would be to wipe off the door and dash when I get in on a rainy day, but it is more handy to wipe the sweat off my face! Who'd have thought we would need a do-rag to operate our trucks? Were they supposed to be standard equipment?
The third fan speed setting is required if you have the sun coming in on you at all. Again, direct the vents either to your body or your face, and/or some combination of that to try to evaporate the sweat. Sitting on leather seats makes your clothes become wet and sticky...
"High speed" is a complete joke. I put that in quotes for a reason. High barely moves any more air through the vents than does the third speed setting, it's just a "more noise" setting to make you "
feel" like something is happening. The only thing truly happening is that you continue to get hotter under the collar listening to the noise waiting on the cold air!
I guess I'm just going to have to dig into the fan/blower/whatever else myself and see what kind of "Mickey Mouse" apparatus they have for a fan. Maybe it's not the blower? Who knows? What worries me is even if we put a high volume fan on the system, will the vent size be enough to allow the air to move? I know that on the minivan, the vents are about the same size, but do move a lot more air. I don't know if there is some very small "mode door" somewhere creating a big bottleneck to reduce the airflow. Oh well, guess I'll have to look and I'll have to try to find a fix for it!! I guess I'll get paid from Chrysler warranty for my time and re-engineering??? SURE!!!
But I shouldn't have to go in and try to diagnose and fix or re-engineer a system on a $56K truck!!! And all of you are correct. The pat answer that it is working as their specs say it should does not get it. I had an '84 VW Jetta with what the Germans "called" an A/C in it, but it would only work on cloudy days or at night when the sun did not heat it up inside. If this is the way this system is to work, I may have to run a long cord to my house and install a home type window unit in the rear sliding window!!! Don't anyone run over my cord if you see me going down the road!
I don't know when exactly I'll have time to open it up, but meanwhile, I'll be planning and thinking about getting a shovel to dig in.