No heat from heater?

Tiny
GRD
  • MEMBER
  • 1 POST
  • 2000 CHEVROLET S-10
  • 4 CYL
  • 2WD
  • AUTOMATIC
  • 78,000 MILES
No heat seems to be up to norm temp, thermostat ok?
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
JDL
  • MECHANIC
  • 16,098 POSTS
Can you feel of the heater hoses under the hood? Are they hot? Is there air flow through the vents?
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
FEESH13937
  • MEMBER
  • 12 POSTS
As long as there is some sort of air blowing, cold, semi warm then try this. I had the same problem on my 2001 s10. As long as there are no antifreeze leaks any where such as chocolate milk oil on the dipstick, antifreeze on the ground and so on, then you should try reverse flushing the heater core. Not to hard to do. Take the the two heater hoses that run into the fire wall on the passenger side of the truck off. One is an inlet and the other an outlet. Take a garden hose with a nozel with a jet setting on it and hold it up to one of the holes of the heater core. Does not matter witch one first as you will do this to both holes. Hold the water pressure for about 2 min. Or so and the water should come out the other hole. You will heare a girggle sound. Take the hose off and put it in the other hole on the opposite side of the one you just shot water into. Hold about 2 min. And the heater core should be cleanded out. This should fix ya right up and you should have burn ya out of the truck heat. Good luck. As long as there is no antifeeze leaking out anywhere then this should do it. If there is antifreeze leaking on the ground prior to this method then the heater core may be shot. Let me know what you find out. Feesh13937@yahoo. Com
title the email, no heat s10 so I dont spam the e-mail
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
LITA COCKROFT WILKINSON
  • MEMBER
  • 1 POST
  • 2000 CHEVROLET S-10
  • 120,000 MILES
The temperature gauge is barely off off 110 and no heat. Replace thermostat, radiator cap and water pump. The truck doesn't seem to be getting hot when you drive it. The hoses are cool to the touch. What now?
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
JACOBANDNICKOLAS
  • MECHANIC
  • 109,645 POSTS
Hi,

The only thing on this vehicle that controls the coolant temperature is the thermostat. Are you certain it was installed correctly? Was it a 195°F thermostat? How cold is it where you are located? If the engine is as warm as it will get and the heater is on, are both heater core hoses still cold?

Let me know. Also, let me know what engine it has.

Take care,
Joe
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
GRINNJ
  • MEMBER
  • 3 POSTS
  • 2000 CHEVROLET S-10
  • 6 CYL
  • 2WD
  • AUTOMATIC
  • 99,000 MILES
Have no heat at all is it heater core, thermostat?HELP
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
DARE2WILL
  • MEMBER
  • 3 POSTS
I had the smae problem first change the thremostat and then if that doesnt work take it into a dealership and get pressure tested cuz it could be a problem with the head
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:15 PM (Merged)
Tiny
DOC410
  • MEMBER
  • 4 POSTS
  • 2000 CHEVROLET S-10
  • 6 CYL
  • 4WD
  • AUTOMATIC
  • 115,000 MILES
No matter where you put the heat dial there is no heat. Even if the heater is off I feel cold air coming from the floor, defrost vent and air duct.
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Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:16 PM (Merged)
Tiny
JACOBANDNICKOLAS
  • MECHANIC
  • 109,645 POSTS
First check this for me. With the engine running, hot, and the heater on, feel both heater core hoses. Both should be hot. Let me know what you find.
Joe
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-2
Saturday, October 3rd, 2020 AT 12:16 PM (Merged)
Tiny
FRANKLIN090409
  • MEMBER
  • 4 POSTS
  • 2001 CHEVROLET S-10
Air Conditioning problem
2001 Chevy S-10 Four Wheel Drive Automatic 126000 miles

My AC works okay for a while but after about ten minutes of driving it gradually starts to blow hot air.
Also, last winter the heater began blowing cold air from the outside, so my heater does'nt work.
Any advice about how to repair this would be greatly
appreciated.

Franklin
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)
Tiny
RASMATAZ
  • MECHANIC
  • 75,992 POSTS
For AC:

An A/C system that blows cold air for awhile then warm air is probably freezing up. This can be caused by air and moisture in the system that allows ice to form and block the orifice tube.

Evacuating the system with a vacuum pump will purge it of unwanted air and moisture. Evacuation should be done with a vacuum pump that is capable of achieving and holding a high vacuum (29 inches) for at least 30 to 45 minutes.

For best performance, an A/C system should contain less than 2% air by weight. For every 1% increase in the amount of air that displaces refrigerant in the system, there will be a corresponding drop of about one degree in cooling performance. More than 6% air can cause a very noticeable drop in cooling performance, and possibly cause evaporator freeze-up.

Air can get inside a system through leaks, by not evacuating the system prior to recharging it, and/or by recharging the system with refrigerant that is contaminated with air. Recovery equipment can suck air into the recycling tank if an A/C system contains air or if the system has a leak. For this reason, the refrigerant recovery tank on recycling equipment must be checked and purged daily. On some equipment, this is done automatically. But on equipment that lacks an automatic purge cycle, tank pressure and temperature has to be measured and compared to a static pressure reference chart.

Some refrigerant identifier equipment can detect air in the system as well as other contaminants. An identifier should be used to check the refrigerant before the system is serviced to prevent cross-contamination of recovery and recycling equipment.

Possible causes of intermittent cooling in a manual A/C system that might be caused by an electrical problem include:

Faulty low pressure cutout switch. This switch prevents the compressor from running if the refrigerant level is low. If the cutout switch is not reading correctly, it can prevent the compressor from coming on.

Faulty compressor clutch. The magnetic clutch on the compressor requires full battery voltage to engage. If the voltage to the clutch is low, or the clutch coils have too much resistance, or the air gap in the clutch is too great, the clutch may not engage to drive the compressor.

Faulty compressor clutch relay. Check to see if the relay is receiving voltage when the A/C is turned on. Also check the relay wiring and ground connections. If bypassing the relay with a jumper wire or routing battery voltage directly to the compressor clutch makes the A/C work, the relay is probably bad.

Faulty A/C control switch. The switch may be worn and not making good contact when it is turned on.

Some possible causes of intermittent cooling (or no cooling) on automatic A/C systems include all of the above, plus:

A problem in the control module or control head (this usually requires using a dealer scan tool to read fault codes and perform self-diagnostics).

A bad temperature sensor (an ambient air temperature sensor, interior air temperature sensor, evaporator temperature sensor, or sunload sensor). Again, a factory scan tool is usually required to perform diagnostics on the system.

For heater: check the thermostat, air mix/blend/mode doors-if it has an heater control valve check that too.
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)
Tiny
FRANKLIN090409
  • MEMBER
  • 4 POSTS
Thanks alot for that info. I will print that up and follow your advice.
Thanks again.
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)
Tiny
FRANKLIN090409
  • MEMBER
  • 4 POSTS
However now with winter coming on I am more concerned about getting the heater fixed rather that the AC. I can live without AC, but having no heater in the winter is real miserable for sure.
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)
Tiny
RASMATAZ
  • MECHANIC
  • 75,992 POSTS
Replace the thermostat and check the heater core/hoses if its clogged up.
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)
Tiny
FRANKLIN090409
  • MEMBER
  • 4 POSTS
Well, I unbolted the steering column and pulled out the entire dashboard. What a site that was. Then I removed the heater/AC modual. Some bolts were hidden real good. It took patience. Had to treat it like a woman. But I replaced the heater core and the blend door actuator. All went back together with a little cracked plastic and a broken light bulb but AC and heater work fine now. Winter shminter bring it on. I'm ready. My heater kicks but now.
I think it was that blend door actuator that caused the problem.
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)
Tiny
RASMATAZ
  • MECHANIC
  • 75,992 POSTS
I'm glad you got it going again-Hot or Cold we need that AC/Heater to work
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Friday, November 27th, 2020 AT 9:34 AM (Merged)

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