Anonymous

Air conditioner compressor

The all purpose forum for any TR7/8 related topics.
Post Reply
nick
TRiffic
Posts: 1679
Joined: 07 Apr 2005 02:00
Location: USA
Contact:

Air conditioner compressor

Postby nick » 02 Jun 2014 20:45

I allowed some oil to leak out of my compressor while it was stored. Now I want to reinstall it but have no idea how much oil leaked or how much should be in there. Anyone have the spec this?

Image[img][IMG]http://i615.photobucket.com/albums/tt234/nickmi/TR7%201975/Yellow.jpg[/img]
nick
'79 TR7 DHC
'76 TR7 FHC

nick
TRiffic
Posts: 1679
Joined: 07 Apr 2005 02:00
Location: USA
Contact:

Postby nick » 05 Jun 2014 20:20

I'll answer my own question. After some digging I found a York maintenance manual. The oil precharge is 14oz if using R12.

http://www.tccimfg.com/docs/2CylinderServiceManual.pdf



Image[img][IMG]http://i615.photobucket.com/albums/tt234/nickmi/TR7%201975/Yellow.jpg[/img]
nick
'79 TR7 DHC
'76 TR7 FHC

Ianftr8
Swagester
Posts: 900
Joined: 12 Dec 2007 17:09
Location: United Kingdom
Contact:

Postby Ianftr8 » 06 Jun 2014 11:03

Not trying to hijack this thread - but here is a little known fact I've just been sent:

The Goldberg Brothers - The Inventors of the Automobile Air Conditioner

Here's a little fact for automotive buffs or just to dazzle your friends.

The four Goldberg brothers, Lowell, Norman, Hiram, and Max, invented and developed the first automobile air-conditioner. On July 17, 1946, the temperature in Detroit was 97 degrees.

The four brothers walked into old man Henry Ford's office and sweet-talked his secretary into telling him that four gentlemen were there with the most exciting innovation in the auto industry since the electric starter.

Henry was curious and invited them into his office.

They refused and instead asked that he come out to the parking lot to their car.

They persuaded him to get into the car, which was about 130 degrees, turned on the air conditioner, and cooled the car off immediately.

The old man got very excited and invited them back to the office, where he offered them $3 million for the patent.

The brothers refused, saying they would settle for $2 million, but they wanted the recognition by having a label, 'The Goldberg Air-Conditioner,' on the dashboard of each car in which it was installed.

Now old man Ford was more than just a little anti-Semitic, and there was no way he was going to put the Goldberg's name on two million Fords.

They haggled back and forth for about two hours and finally agreed on $4 million and that just their first names would be shown.

And so to this day, all Ford air conditioners show --
Lo, Norm, Hi, and Max -- on the controls.

Control yourself !!!

Cheers

Ian



Ian Freeman
1979 TR8 DHC KDU 315V Poseidon Green USA car that never crossed the pond.
Triumph Courier
Triumph owner for 32 years

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 280 guests

cron