โDec-01-2018 11:39 AM
โMay-29-2021 07:15 PM
โSep-02-2019 12:41 PM
โSep-02-2019 10:47 AM
โSep-02-2019 10:37 AM
dougrainer wrote:
This is a common problem on Ford Class A chassis going back over 20 years. The ONLY sure fix is to install a 12 volt vacuum pump and plug the vacuum line from the engine. You will have people tell you to test this and test that and add another accumulator, and check all the vacuum lines and motors on the dash evap system. The plain fact is, the aftermarket Dash AC systems on Ford Class A's have inherent vacuum leaks and cannot overcome the engine going to zero vacuum on full acceleration or climbing hills. You can do a search for this problem on this forum and see all the silly things people are told to do, when the plain fact is, you need the 12 volt pump. I speak from over 38 years and still working on Motorhome Dash systems and YES, I have installed a few of the 12 volt pumps, even years ago when the Coach Maker paid for the pump installation when the RV's were under warranty. Doug
The truth was in the middle. I found a vac leak with a pump tester. And Doug Rainer was right .. the F53 dash is inherently leaky. Installed the vacuum pump Doug cites. Bought the wiring harness while only using the black and green. Tied power to an ignition- on piggyback fuse. Unit shuts off when vacuum is correct. Does not run when ignition is off due to choice of where to tap 15 amp fuse.
***Link Removed***
โDec-03-2018 06:43 PM
dougrainer wrote:
This is a common problem on Ford Class A chassis going back over 20 years. The ONLY sure fix is to install a 12 volt vacuum pump and plug the vacuum line from the engine. You will have people tell you to test this and test that and add another accumulator, and check all the vacuum lines and motors on the dash evap system. The plain fact is, the aftermarket Dash AC systems on Ford Class A's have inherent vacuum leaks and cannot overcome the engine going to zero vacuum on full acceleration or climbing hills. You can do a search for this problem on this forum and see all the silly things people are told to do, when the plain fact is, you need the 12 volt pump. I speak from over 38 years and still working on Motorhome Dash systems and YES, I have installed a few of the 12 volt pumps, even years ago when the Coach Maker paid for the pump installation when the RV's were under warranty. Doug
https://www.amazon.com/APDTY-015325-Vacuum-Pump-Supplemental/dp/B00BVQZSKO
โDec-03-2018 06:38 PM
โDec-02-2018 04:28 PM
wolfe10 wrote:
Doug's answer IS spot on for any driver of a gasoline powered vehicle who expects adequate vacuum to operate the dash HVAC system under heavy load= low engine vacuum. Suspect a number are fit after a first drive in real mountains where sustained high throttle/low vacuum conditions are encountered.
No question, it will not magically fix other leaks in the system if they are large enough to overcome the supplemental pump.
BTW, that is the standard vacuum pump on a large number of diesel vehicles, since diesel engines have no vacuum. VERY common pump.
โDec-02-2018 02:13 PM
โDec-02-2018 02:06 PM
The leads me to focus on the vacuum accumulator but I'm not sure how to test it. I can't even figure out how to remove the lines going in and out and I don't want to break anything fumbling around. Any suggestions?
โDec-02-2018 01:24 PM
โDec-02-2018 12:52 PM
dougrainer wrote:JaxDad wrote:
Glad you found the actual problem instead of just throwing silly wasted parts at it.
So much for the โONLYโ solution........
The main reason I wonโt go to the stealerships is for exactly that reason, thereโs no THINKING about the problem and finding the solution, itโs just throwing parts at it because a book or computer said to do that.
Thankfully the only place where such foolishness does NOT exist is in aviation, which given the price of parts is a VERY good thing.
According to the description the OP made, Heavy acceleration, The problem was the vacuum was used up......
Doug
Mike Schriber wrote:
It actually seems to be doing it now under low throttle steady state conditions as well. Obviously a vacuum issue but I'm not finding any obvious leaks.
Mike
โDec-02-2018 08:33 AM
dougrainer wrote:JaxDad wrote:
Glad you found the actual problem instead of just throwing silly wasted parts at it.
So much for the โONLYโ solution........
The main reason I wonโt go to the stealerships is for exactly that reason, thereโs no THINKING about the problem and finding the solution, itโs just throwing parts at it because a book or computer said to do that.
Thankfully the only place where such foolishness does NOT exist is in aviation, which given the price of parts is a VERY good thing.
According to the description the OP made, Heavy acceleration, The problem was the vacuum was used up, which IS a common problem on Ford Chassis vacuum supply. The difference is YOU don't trust dealerships, that is fine. But you come to me and then you pay me $150 an hour to find a supposed vacuum leak, then I find some leak and fix it $300 later. Then you come back and tell me the problem still happens on full acceleration, you then pay me MORE. So, a customer comes to me and based on MY EXPERIANCE, I charge him $150 install plus the $75 for the Vacuum pump and at $225, he is fixed EVEN IF HE HAS A SMALL VACUUM LEAK. The 12 volt pump will overcome any supposed vacuum leak. Lets wait and see if the OP's problem is fixed on heavy acceleration. Doug
โDec-02-2018 08:31 AM
JaxDad wrote:
Take a small propane torch and unscrew the head leaving just the valve and pipe, then slip a piece of tubing over the end of the pipe. With the engine idling and the valve on the torch open (but not lit obviously) run the end of tube along every vacuum tube in the HVC system.
When you get to the vacuum leak the engine will inhale the propane and the extra โfuelโ will cause the engine to speed up a little, when you pull it away it goes back down again.
It makes finding vacuum leaks super easy.
โDec-02-2018 05:02 AM
JaxDad wrote:
Glad you found the actual problem instead of just throwing silly wasted parts at it.
So much for the โONLYโ solution........
The main reason I wonโt go to the stealerships is for exactly that reason, thereโs no THINKING about the problem and finding the solution, itโs just throwing parts at it because a book or computer said to do that.
Thankfully the only place where such foolishness does NOT exist is in aviation, which given the price of parts is a VERY good thing.