I had mine rebuilt by "Heater Valve King" in CA in 1997. Wasn't cheap at $84
but did a great job. Found him in Hemmings.
I remember telling my wife it looked better than any jewelry she had. Of
course that says something about my preference for truck parts over jewelry.
Best regards,
Emory Hodges
EEHodges@aol.com
48 Chevy 3/4 ton "Rack"
In a message dated 1/5/01 6:38:55 PM Eastern Standard Time,
jforbes@primenet.com writes:
> The deluxe heater in my 59 extended cab pickup has
> been leaking, so I started messing with my spare
> heater, in the hopes that I can get it to not leak.
> The heater in the truck had a bad control valve, so
> I bypassed it with a mickey mouse plumber's
> nightmare of plastic elbows and heater hose. I'd
> like to get the temperature valve working in it.
>
> I took apart the spare heater, and checked for
> leaks. I have an air pressure regulator, with a
> gage on it, and quick disconnect fittings, so I can
> put it in line with the air hose when painting,
> spraying drywall texture, etc. It also works for
> leak checking, I just set it to about 10 to 15 psi,
> put a nozzle on it, and use it to blow into the
> heater core...while plugging up the other core
> fitting with my thumb, and holding it underwater to
> check for bubbles. The core didn't leak, but the
> control valve did. So, I took the valve apart. It
> has a rubber washer with a nipple in the middle that
> fits around the valve shaft. The rubber is getting
> dried out, and cracking some, not all the way thru,
> but enough to let it leak.
>
> Where could I get a new washer for it? Seems silly
> to pay $30-40 for a new valve (missing the
> thermostatic tube, at that) when I just need a new
> washer...
>
> Also, I put the thermostatic tube in a pot of hot
> water, to see if it moves the gizmo at the
> valve...and it does! not sure if it's enough
> movement, it goes about 1/8" in water that's close
> to boiling.
>
> Any input welcome. I'm in digest mode, so if you
> kindly send replies to my email as well as the list
> I'll see them sooner :)
>
> Thanks,
> Jim F
> 59s in AZ
> oletrucks is devoted to Chevy and GM trucks built between 1941 and 1959
oletrucks is devoted to Chevy and GM trucks built between 1941 and 1959
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