A/C Delete
but if your a/c is off your clutch is disengaged and really doesn't support that much loss, of hp.... also even when on your A/c is on, it will cut off at WOT... Also having your a/c on cools your engine as it passes through the raditor. seriously it makes a huge difference in temps.... Yes there is a gain in HP by removing it and of course MPG, but I just personally don't see how it out weighs sweating your ***** of in the summer.....
As for the heater. your a/c and heat run seperatly you have a heater coil that runs radiator fluid through...... thats why your heater doesn't really work until your tstat opens.... Your a/c has a similar coil that runs 134a through which produces the cool air....
Does anyone have their A/c compressor that they would sell/give my their relay switches in the back.... I'm not sure how many there are or which one I need but my cut of switch is dead.
first off the air coming off the condensor is HOT. It's being discharged as a hot, highside gas and then cools of to a liquid. The condensor is a heat exhanger. The hot air is being pulled THROUGH the radiator and heat soaking in. The only reason that you see temps drop is because of the fans running.
secondly. The fans have 2 totaly different triggers. They have low and high speeds. At low speed BOTH fans will run on low speed. on high BOTH fans will run on high speed. One fan isn't just for AC. They work in pair. Low speed fans will come on ANY time the AC is on. It will also come on anytime coolant temps are above 227*. High speed fans come on anytime the AC head pressure reaches 248 PSI. High speed fans will also come on anytime the ECT reads 235 or higher.
people that want the tenps to remain lower have them programed as such or install manual fan switchs. This will turn the fans on in the correct way as if the PCM was doing it's job and doesn't cause any harm where jumping the relays can.
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If your fans come on at 120 you have some issues. Generaly with a low temp thermo you tend to program them on around 180*. if they come on lower then that it's just as bad as having them on from start up. Your not even at closed loop at 120 so there is no reason to impeed coolant temp rise before that.
Also, drilling holes in the thermo is a BAD idea. You want the coolant to go into bypass mode (not flowing through the radiator) during a cold start up to get the motor heated up faster. With holes in teh thermo your allowing coolant to flow all the time which means again, longer warm up temps.
Also, drilling holes in the thermo is a BAD idea. You want the coolant to go into bypass mode (not flowing through the radiator) during a cold start up to get the motor heated up faster. With holes in teh thermo your allowing coolant to flow all the time which means again, longer warm up temps.
i would be too nervous that i would forget to turn the fans on if i had it on a manual switch. that would be typical of my luck. if i could get both fans to come on at the same time there still would be the benifit of a more evenly cooled the radiator. provided that article was still using the temp sensor and did not have them run all the time. i should email GMHTP and see if they can tell me which issue the article is 1n.
This is why people like to run the cars as cool as possible at the tracks. But there is something as "too" cold. Like I said, you want to come up to operating temps fast but then keep them controlable after that. If you keep it too cool for too long your killing your gas milage and can actualy cause slight harm to the motor.
you don't need to worry about "remembering" the switch depending on what kind you get. Like the ones that I sell, most will allow for stock operation as well. For instence with mine. It's a 3 ways switch. Center position will allow the stock operation of the fans based on the PCM trigger. Example. Switch off. Temps hit high enough for either the stock program or the hypertech program to call for fan operation. The fans will still kick on just as if you never had the switch. But when you want them on sooner IE at the track or sitting in traffic you can put the switch on low (both low speed fans come on) or high (both high speed fans come on) and they will run for as long as you have the switch on.
Thats exactly what I use along with the stock fan program. I allow it to run between 200-210 during normal driving but at the track I keep temps between 175-180 the whole time.
This is why people like to run the cars as cool as possible at the tracks. But there is something as "too" cold. Like I said, you want to come up to operating temps fast but then keep them controlable after that. If you keep it too cool for too long your killing your gas milage and can actualy cause slight harm to the motor.
you don't need to worry about "remembering" the switch depending on what kind you get. Like the ones that I sell, most will allow for stock operation as well. For instence with mine. It's a 3 ways switch. Center position will allow the stock operation of the fans based on the PCM trigger. Example. Switch off. Temps hit high enough for either the stock program or the hypertech program to call for fan operation. The fans will still kick on just as if you never had the switch. But when you want them on sooner IE at the track or sitting in traffic you can put the switch on low (both low speed fans come on) or high (both high speed fans come on) and they will run for as long as you have the switch on.
Thats exactly what I use along with the stock fan program. I allow it to run between 200-210 during normal driving but at the track I keep temps between 175-180 the whole time.




