AC compressor clutch

1minkey, Jan 15, 4:22am
05 legacy is this easy to replace! Costly!

wayne.collect, Jan 16, 7:59am
only one way to find out, ring a local dealer and also a local AC garage.

cuda.340, Jan 16, 5:51pm
easiest method is to reclaim the gas & remove the compressor & repair it on the bench. ok if you have the gear, costly if you're paying for it.

elect70, Jan 17, 2:34am
probably cant buy new 1separatelywholecompressor, sure its stuffed !look around for used compressor .

bigfatmat1, Jan 17, 3:10am
You can buy them separately price up from auto sparky or ac place you can buy after market ones as well. The usually around the $200 -400 just for the part heaps of room on a legacy should be able to be done in place. or go the second hand compressor option

bigfatmat1, Jan 17, 3:12am
you can also repair them sometimes for less new bearing and or rewound

guest, Sep 25, 11:26am
hey i know [NAME OF SHAUNA'S EMPLOYER REMOVED BY SHAUNA!]someone will be making a kllniig on a buffet lunch' that they got some friend or family member to quote an exhorbitant price for and you get pasta, cold pizza and sandwiches with fillings nobody likes eggy ones and salmon etc then you'll get a swanky printed agenda summat like this :* intro to photocopy 101 (10 mins ie push green button)* paper jam removal (60 mins)* get inky bits off fingers (20 mins) well all frikin day really!* how to phone engineer for support (15mins)* buffet (30 mins more if outside for fag)how much does that add up to?? hmmm phew .. sure you got enough time to do this all in 2 hours?might as well go home after your training course . with your manual they supplied to read up on of course

guest, Sep 26, 4:36pm
Hi Aaron,I would like to thank you for the in-depth reviews as well as evnryoee else's insight and feedback on their experiences with Nest. I have been following the development, and like others, I was enthralled from the get-go and wanted to get one. At the time I couldn't justify the expense, but then I read an article the other day that Nest was to be sold in Apple stores (which reminded me about the device), and started reading up on it again. I came across your blog, and other reviews, that were actual user reviews, and not the marketing ra-ra we see everywhere else. I learned a lot over the last day or two, and decided I needed a concrete list of items to be satisfied to make a purchase worth it. I compiled them, and sent a letter off to support, hoping that it will get passed along to the right department:==========================Dear Nest Support,I hope this email gets forwarded to the people who need to know. While I am only speaking for myself, I do believe my points outlined below reflect the needs and desires of many potential customers.First, I would like to thank Aaron for writing extensively on his experiences, and collecting feedback from others, on his blog at . Please do take the time to read through his posts as well.I would require the following points to be available on the Nest Thermostat prior to making a purchase, in order of importance:- Settings should never be lost. Settings need to be stored in such a manner, that they will remain even after a power failure and the battery draining. The unit absolutely must be 100% dependable, especially in cold-weather climates, so that it does not loose connection with the servers due to a fault of its own. I must be able to rely on controlling the unit when away from the home at all times, especially in cold-weather climates.- Power-saving algorithms need to be smarter. All factors need to be taken into account when calculating energy usage: Time to heat or cool and associated energy cost. Finding the sweet spot between running too often to keep the temp consistent, and too little, resulting in huge temperature swings, both of which use more energy. Determining if running the fan alone will reduce the perceived temperature enough to cool the house by one or two degrees, factoring in outside temperature, and humidity. I know there is an AirWave mode implemented, but I believe this could be taken a step farther.- Year-over-year data history. If I cannot actually verify improvements in energy-savings over long periods, then there is no justification for spending 5 times what other programmable thermostats cost.- Smarter manual programability. One should be able to specify a soft-target (can be overwritten by learning) or hard-target (will not be erased from schedule) when manually programming the schedule. There needs to be more flexibility in the programming to allow for more individual needs.- Target Temp-Time settings. Allowing for manual programming of a target temperature at a given time. The unit will then calculate when it needs to start heating or cooling to reach that temperature at the requested time.- Power-stealing needs to be eliminated. Some units are very sensitive to fluctuations regarding the voltage of the signal wires. Redesigning the hardware unit to accept a power adapter would be good. Alternatively, a redesign to eliminate power fluctuations stemming from the thermostat would be jn order.- Redesigned hardware unit. For the Nest to be effective, it needs to be located in that portion of the house that receives the most traffic. For that to work, the display needs to be able to be mounted remotely from the base unit. The base unit should be connected to the existing wiring, while the display with sensors needs to be located somewhere much more accessible. The display would communicate back to the base unit and relay information. Short of this, multiple nests should be installable, with only one actually being hardwired, and the additional units relaying information back to the main unit. In this manner multiple rooms could be monitored at once with only one HVAC unit available.- Calculate actual savings. I should be able to enter my KWh or gas usage and costs for a given time, say over a month, and be able to calculate actual savings.I'm sorry to say that as of now, I cannot see how a purchase of the Nest is feasible. Don't get me wrong, I do want to see the Nest succeed, because it has such great potential. But as of now, all the Nest has is a nice body, but no smarts. I'd rather have a unit that doesn't look nice, but actually helps me save money easier there are just too many flaws to justify the expense.I sincerely hope this gets passed along to management and R&D so that these issues can be taking into consideration. I will keep watching the development of Nest, and hopefully find myself seeing a purchase as justifiable due to improvements in user experience and design, but most of all in efficiency.==========================I do hope they improve their product, as they have a tremendous opportunity to make a real difference.Thanks again!~Mike

guest, Sep 28, 2:02pm
That's really thinking at an imsvespire level