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Alan, I'm assuming you are speaking about the foam on the vent door.
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Yes, that's the foam I'm refering to. Same stuff might work inside as well. Although, with direct contact to the hot coil, it might deteriorate pretty quickly and there might be something else you could use.
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Is there also something that is wrapped around the ends of the Coil, where it contacts, or "sits" within the heater box?
While it's been a year since I took it out, I seem to recall the coil being a "loose fit" in the heater box, and thought there should be some way to absorb any rattles, etc.
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My TR4's heater didn't have any foam or anything else inside, and I'm fairly sure it never had anything and was never removed from the car and disassembled before. The core was a tight fit, ain't no way it could ever rattle. Might be different from the heater in your car in some ways.
Incidentally, my heater never had either the antifreeze warning label or the Smith's model/serial number label plates. There aren't even any drilled holes for the rivets that hold them onto the heater, so I suspect the two plates were never installed.
This heater itself was probably installed at the factory, according to the BMIHT certificate. I suppose it's possible it could have been replaced some time between the original 1964 sale of the car and when I bought it in 1977... heater (and the stuff inside it) didn't look like it, though.
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