G
Guest
Guest
Guest
Offline
I heard all the horror stories about how tough it was to remove the heater from a TR6. Well, I did it in about two hours, all without removing the dash or any instruments. I did have to remove the cubby box, which I will just pop-rivet back in. The only challenge was the top left bolt which I removed from the ashtray hole. I took a cheap 7/16" box wrench and heated it with a torch, hammered it at a 90 degree angle, dropped it in water and, voila!, instant heater-bolt-removing-tool. I had to loosen the choke cable a bit, other than that it really wasn't that hard. The problem will be rebuilding the unit. The housing wasn't rusted badly but will need repainting. There are a number of foam strips and door insulation which I will have to find at Home Depot. The motor and heater core I purchased new from TRF some time ago. Not sure where I can get the large rubber gasket on top of the unit, looks like a toilet ring. Will see if TRF or others have it. Not sure what condition the resistor strip is in, don't really know if this can burn out. Only Rimmer lists it. They sell the rubber gasket in an install kit but list the price as "inquire". That worries me. Does anyone know anything about the resistor, and should it be replaced? I just intend to clean the unit up, rattle can it black, put in some new foam and reinstall. Buy two new short heater hoses (again) and will cruise in style in the winter. Too, the wiring inside the heater looks a little crispy so I may have to sub some new wiring inside. Bottom line, removing the heater isn't that scary. It is rebuilding it that seems to be a bit daunting.
Bill
Bill
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 