Thomas Garner wrote: > Did the 64 Classic with 232 engine have A/C as an option? Does A/C rob it of much power if I put it on mine? Unless you're doing a restoration, I most strenuously suggest a good aftermarket system like Vintage Air. Believe me, I've done it both ways (or tried to). If it's a restoration OK, but 40+ years of development has gone into the new stuf, and believe me, you want that! It's like 6V generator vs. 12V alternator! THe bottom line on compressors is this: the oldYork style "lawmower engine" compressors are inefficient, large, heavy. The reason the got a bad rep (deserved) is that they are MOST efficient at low speeds -- eg. when idling and in-town. At higher speeds, like highway cruise, they are less efficient. They are one or two-piston designs that are inefficient and consume lots of energy. They are all now very old and all need to be rebuilt, period. The new Sanden type are small, light, 7-piston designs, that are more efficient at higher speeds. They consume lots less power over all. There's a mount kit that adapts them to York mounting plates. The old plumbing used flare fittings and even some clamp-type compression fittings. These are hard to make not leak (with good care they do work first time, but... not so good when they are old! hint hint) The new fittings are all O-ring. They basically never leak. All the new stuff comes with O-rings. There are old-timey-looking under-dash units. I have one in my 63 Classic. It fits fine. Wouldn't work with floor shift, probably. Check that. h134a cools as well as r12 if you have a big condenser (in front of the radiator). Factory condensers are often "as small as we can get away with" for cost. Aftermarket ones are larger and not dented and fins all good and connections are not corroded and all O-ring. There's nothing magical about R12. There are some issues back-converting old ssytems to h134a, but that's due to old seals and inefficient condensers. There is essentially a "calibration" in the evaporator unit (inside the car) that is R12 or h134a specific. They're close enough to be "close enough" if you have a good clean system and conver R12 to 134. THIS! is where people complain that the new stuff isn't as good as the old -- in marginal old systems designed for R12. Last, alas, it's simply not cheap. I tried to use a factory under-dash system, it was a major PITA, and then in the end the expansion valve was bad, and would have cost too much to re-cal for h134, I bit the bullet and spent the $250 (in 2004?) for the under dash unit. Compressor was around $250, condenser $100? $150? dryer, hoses, blah blah. Another thing you can do that factory doesn't is use enough hose so that you can un-do a component (evap, compressor) and move it out of the way to work! Hose is cheap enough that an extra 5 feet in the system is $20. BFD. Oops, one more thing; the hoses MUST be crimped with a $450 tool. However, the thing to do is, buy all the hose and crimped ends, mock up the whole thing, etc. THEN fit the hoses, push on the fittings, and rotate the hose so there's no kinks. Once you crimp the ends you can't twist them. Mark them with a paint marker, take the hoses off, and bring then to a hose shop and simply have them crimp them. The paint marks will be there for alignment. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list