|
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Uh oh . . . Hacked Through the A/C Hose
Well . . . I finally got around to switching out the seized engine in my 300D. There was a very large A/C line going across the front top of the engine that prohibited the engine from coming out. I tried everything I could think of . . . liquid wrench, heat, heat then cold, hammer . . . nothing would make the large nut holding the rubber tube to the metal tube free! So, out of desparation I cut through it with a hacksaw and figured I'll repair it next summer when I need the A/C. What have I done? Will this be a terribly expensive or time consuming replacement? The nut is quite large (like inch and a quarter, inch and a half) and sized so that it doesn't slip over the flanged end of the hose. The hose itself is also fairly large diameter and disappears into the firewall to the other side in the cabin.
The car is an '81 300D. I'm concerned that I will have to dive deep into the A/C system on the inside of the car . . . which I've heard is a nightmare. Anybody know? Anybody have any idea how I'm going to be able to loosen that nut on the donor engine? Thanks, Eric '71 220D 135,000 miles '81 300D In Progress |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Worst case a pipe wrench will work but it will mar the nut so save that for last.
__________________
Proud owner of .... 1971 280SE W108 1979 300SD W116 1983 300D W123 1975 Ironhead Sportster chopper 1987 GMC 3/4 ton 4X4 Diesel 1989 Honda Civic (Heavily modified) --------------------- Section 609 MVAC Certified --------------------- "He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
The hoses can be replaced, it's better that you cut the hose than metal tubing. Block things off, keep them as dry as possible. A/C systems hate moisture.
__________________
'82 300SD - 361K mi - "Blue" "Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement." listen, look, .........and duck. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Scooby says Rutroo................
Hope you cut through the hose and not the metal pipe. You can have the hose rebuilt provided you didn't cut through the metal pipe. If you cut through the metal pipe, I would suggest you pull one out at a pick-UR-part place AND have that one rebuilt. DON'T cut through that one, the rebuilder needs to know the turns and angles. Leave it intack.
__________________
84 300DT Puke Yellow. Totalled after 438,000 84 300DT Orient Red. 169,000 (actual mileage may vary) 2002 Explorer EB (wife's) |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Why didn't you just follow the hose down to the next fitting and disconnect it there?
Also, when you have fittings that are frozen together, try using a pair of pipe wrenches. The harder you pull, the harder the wrench grips. I removed this hose a couple of weeks ago. It wasn't stuck through. But two big pipe wrenches would have busted that fitting free.
__________________
1987 300TDT 1981 VW MKI Caddy 1.6 diesel, waiting on engine swap 1983 D-50 Power Ram 4x4 "Mitsubishi" 2.3 turbo diesel assorted gas powered crap and motorcycles RIP: 1984 300TDT, 1982 300TDT, 1984 190D 2.2, 1992 300D 2.5, 1987 300TDT, 1982 Maxima LD28, 1983 Maxima LD28, Isuzu C223 P'ups X3, 1983 Holiday Rambler 6.2 Banks turbo diesel, 1984 Winnebago LeSharo 2.1 TD, 1985 Allegro 6.5 |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
If you can get both pieces of the hose and fittings free, you can probably take them to the local hydraulics joint and have them make up a new hose. They will reuse the metal part and replace the cut hose with new barrier hose (R139a proof). Probably not cheap, but a solution. I had to have a bunce of A/C lines made up for a Suburban I had a few years back. It was so old the original hoses were no longer available from GM. They just took the old ones and put new hose on the fittings. Worked great.
|
Bookmarks |
|
|