1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

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kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

My FSM agrees with Tim. 80% of 2 3/4 lbs
kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

I will call my local Chevy dealer tomorrow
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Tim
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by Tim »

The higher capacity listing is most likely for an A6 compressor, which this does not have. Also, there is or was enough refrigerant to engage the clutch if "All" the electrical was operating correctly. Jumping the clutch coil only provides data for a single system component.

The data I posted came from ALLData, 2023
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kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

Thanks Tim. I am doing diagnostics on the bcm also
kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

JohnHere
Kenny, it might be worth calling your local Chevrolet service department to see what they can tell you.
I called several and none can go back to 1986. They are all relying on ALLDATA. They polly know more about UFOs than the 86 Corvette.
So I am going with my GM Service Manual...which states 2 3/4 lbs R-12....which translates to 36 oz of R134 (80% amount of original R-12).
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by tbirdtbird »

Just FYI, the 80% number is not hard and fast...it may require closer to 90% to properly function. Bottom line, start with 80% and add from there as needed. Somewhere in the archives here is a procedure for charging an unknown system posted by bohica (Brad)
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kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

tbirdtbird
Just FYI, the 80% number is not hard and fast...it may require closer to 90% to properly function. Bottom line, start with 80% and add from there as needed.
Yes, I had heard that and that was my plan. Thanks.
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by Tim »

We're talking about a Vette here with an accumulator. The inlet and outlet on the evap should be close in temp. So charge to 80% and feel the difference. Slowly add more until they feel the same.
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kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

Tim
We're talking about a Vette here with an accumulator. The inlet and outlet on the evap should be close in temp. So charge to 80% and feel the difference. Slowly add more until they feel the same.
Thanks.Wanna buy a vette? :lol:
kenlou
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Re: 1986 Corvette R-12 to R-134a Conversion

Post by kenlou »

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9.jpg (88.5 KiB) Viewed 2815 times
Does anyone know anything about the triangle shaped stamp on the GM R4 compressor body? Does it signify anything, polarity?
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