That is the temp sensor for the snorkel vacuum motor. It normally opens the hot air by-pass on cold start-up and closes it as the motor warms up.Thanks for the link! Very helpful. Is the vacuum valve? with the 2 tubes in the center of the cleaner something that’s reproduced? If it’s available, I’d like to replace it.
Yes to the first part. It does need to be connected correctly for it to work. You may have to try with vacuum to each side to verify.OK. So, if I understand this correctly, one side of the temp sensor is supplied with manifold vacuum, and the other side goes to the snorkel vacuum motor. When the engine is cold, the temp sensor allows manifold vacuum to pull the motor door closed, routing warm air from above the exhaust manifold into the air cleaner. As the engine warms, the temp sensor closes vacuum to the snorkel motor, which opens the door to the cooler engine compartment air. If I have that right, here's my question ...
Shouldn't the temp sensor hold vacuum? If I connect the manifold side to a vacuum source (tester), and I plug the other side, the temp sensor vacuum bleeds down quickly. I'm concerned if I hook the lines up on the engine, this will be the source of a vacuum leak. I have 2 of these temp sensors, and they both behave the same way. What am I missing?
Thanks.
+1. good test.I bench tested mine by hooking up two short length vacuum hoses with a vacuum pump/brake bleeder on one end. I then submerged the bi-metal valve in hot tap water and pumped up the vacuum to 10-15 lbs. If you have the pump on the correct side of the valve and the valve is working properly, the pump should hold vacuum. If not try switching the pump to the hose on the other side or check your hoses for leaks. After a few minutes of it holding vacuum in the hot water bowl, I removed the valve (still holding vacuum and submerged it a bowl of cold ice water, which will cause a properly functioning valve to open and the vacuum to be released.
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