Heater control cable in engine compartment

Aftermarket Mopar piece. Many times, the company Everco would provide aftermarket replacement water valves for the Fuselage cars which were metal rather than the OEM multi-color phenolic plastic. The "plastic" was perceived as such as the metal was perceived to be a better, long-term item. Either vacuum controls (as my '70 DH43N car has) or cable controls (as our '72 Newport Royal has).

CBODY67
 
Aftermarket Mopar piece. Many times, the company Everco would provide aftermarket replacement water valves for the Fuselage cars which were metal rather than the OEM multi-color phenolic plastic. The "plastic" was perceived as such as the metal was perceived to be a better, long-term item. Either vacuum controls (as my '70 DH43N car has) or cable controls (as our '72 Newport Royal has).

CBODY67

So your 72 Newport has a similar piece as this one? Would you have a pic of how it's connected? Thx
 
So your 72 Newport has a similar piece as this one? Would you have a pic of how it's connected? Thx
That car still has the OEM valve on it. One difference is that the cable goes into a spring clip that is a friction-fit, which goes over the stud out of the valve, which opens and closes the valve.

On that car, the heater cable is a two-piece affair, rather than one piece as suspected. There is also an a/c compressor switch which turns off the compressor about 1/2 way to the full-hot position. The ONLY way to get the compressor turned off on a system that runs the compressor all of the time. As you move the lever from cold to full-hot, about half way, there is a slight click, after which the compressor is off. I can reposition the switch just past that click, but have the valve at full-cold. End result, the heater still gets hot enough being open only 1/2 way.

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