joexsmoot
Nov 14, 2016Explorer
Dual Alternators for A/C Removal, newbie
Good morning everyone! I'm joe, new to the forum. To give a super quick backstory, I bought a 87 Minnie Winnie for $500 about a year ago, it was stripped and a leaky mess. 1 year later, me and my girlfriend updated the whole thing. Took it on one or two trips, engine smoked a lot.
Fast forward, i'm pulling the 460 8 cyl 7.5l EFI out, and replacing with one with lower mileage. The A/C did not work, and it is the old style refrigerant which is hard to come by and expensive, especially if I don't even know why it didn't work. However our 110v roof top unit works amazingly, and i'd like to capitalize on that.
Is it possible and realistic to remove the A/C compressor and install an additional alternator in it's place? I would run the 2nd alternator's lead (with external voltage regulator) directly to a fuse block which connects to my house battery bank and the DC to AC inverter
Ideally, it'd go something like this:
This would be something that would benefit me by: saving me to upgrade the A/C system to the current refrigerant, be a lot more cost effective (alternator is $100 autozone, wiring and fuse roughly $80, no frills regulator $30-50) VS starting off with a $350 compressor (autozone) let alone whatever else needs to be replaced (sensors, tubing, condenser, cooler, blower assembly are all 35+ years old, plus refrigerant etc). When the DC to AC inverter isn't drawing more then what the 2nd alternator is supplying it acts as a charging unit for my batteries, which saves me $100-300 just for that unit alone.
I don't use the unit dry very often, it's usually hooked up to some form of campsite power. I figure this method would be best for my short and sporadic uses. It benefits me cost wise, I don't ever plan on selling, and I don't foresee a power issue seeing the house batteries / appliances are a completely isolated charging system.
What do you all think?? Let me know, feel free to give me any ideas or issues you forsee in the future!
THANKS EVERYONE!!!
Fast forward, i'm pulling the 460 8 cyl 7.5l EFI out, and replacing with one with lower mileage. The A/C did not work, and it is the old style refrigerant which is hard to come by and expensive, especially if I don't even know why it didn't work. However our 110v roof top unit works amazingly, and i'd like to capitalize on that.
Is it possible and realistic to remove the A/C compressor and install an additional alternator in it's place? I would run the 2nd alternator's lead (with external voltage regulator) directly to a fuse block which connects to my house battery bank and the DC to AC inverter
Ideally, it'd go something like this:
This would be something that would benefit me by: saving me to upgrade the A/C system to the current refrigerant, be a lot more cost effective (alternator is $100 autozone, wiring and fuse roughly $80, no frills regulator $30-50) VS starting off with a $350 compressor (autozone) let alone whatever else needs to be replaced (sensors, tubing, condenser, cooler, blower assembly are all 35+ years old, plus refrigerant etc). When the DC to AC inverter isn't drawing more then what the 2nd alternator is supplying it acts as a charging unit for my batteries, which saves me $100-300 just for that unit alone.
I don't use the unit dry very often, it's usually hooked up to some form of campsite power. I figure this method would be best for my short and sporadic uses. It benefits me cost wise, I don't ever plan on selling, and I don't foresee a power issue seeing the house batteries / appliances are a completely isolated charging system.
What do you all think?? Let me know, feel free to give me any ideas or issues you forsee in the future!
THANKS EVERYONE!!!