Repair and Troubleshooting the AutoTemp II
This section is meant to help you get the ATC system back up and running. It is not meant as a repair manual for your A/C system or engine repair. It is assumed you have a working compressor and a/c system capable of moving heat and that your engine is in fairly good tune and still able to produce the proper manifold vacuum. If not....start with that and come back here when your done.
But first....
Before you start digging into the system or go crazy looking at the diagnosis matrix.....
Start with the simple stuff first.
1)Make sure all your fuses are up and energized. Voltage should be 13.5volts more or less 1/2 volt.
2)Confirm engine is producing enough steady vacuum for the system to operate correctly. Typical engine vacuum is 16” at idle and fairly steady.
3) Verify the a/c compressor is working and that it is properly charged and that the a/c system is able to properly coil pulling the evaporator.
4) If a lack of heat is the problem, check that hot water is actually getting past the valve to the heater core. Is the heater valve plugged or stuck shut?
Just these four issues above will resolve most of the typical problems associated with the system. Most of the diagnosis charts end in or have one of the above as a possible failure point. So why not start with those.
As we continue you’ll see why.
“My system is not working at all and I checked all the above.....”
Vacuum and electricity make the system work. Vacuum drives the damper door motors and activates the switches that actually turn the system on. Electricity drives the blower fan and compressor clutch. Both of these last two go through the ATC to make them work
Let’s start with starting.... the engine.
In a normally operating system when you start the engine, it takes about three to four seconds for engine vacuum to build in the accumulator and through the control panel with enough force to get to and activate the master switch and compressor switch. (Refer to previous sections for location on the left side on top of the airbox).
Here are what the two switches look like. The green is the master power switch and the yellow is for energizing the compressor clutch. This is the goal for checking vacuum. You can either start checking the vacuum here and if good check for power at one of the connectors to the green vacuum switch. That’s the one that makes the clicking sound a few seconds after you start the car. If that didn’t happen, you need to back up and look for a lot as from the beginning.
A quick way to see if you have enough vacuum going to the system is to pull the purple vacuum line of the accumulator (black coffee can mounted on the passenger side wheel cover) to check for a good vacuum to the system.
Put a vacuum gauge on the nipple that fed the purple line and with the engine running, take a reading.
Here we can see only about 10” of vacuum. That’s a problem. Next, with the gauge still connected, turn engine off and look at the gauge. If it doesn’t drop,then the check valve of the accumulator is good. If not, you have another problem. You can either replace the accumulator and check valve or simply install a check valve in line with the black rubber source line. Check again and if it holds, your good. If not, your coffee can has a leak or the seal holding the check valve is leaking. But, you get the picture.... it has to hold vacuum.
It also needs to be enough vacuum. So, assuming you’ve got and can hold vacuum up to now, it needs to be more than the 10” I just read. Let’s start with the source at the vacuum takeoff from the manifold and make sure we have the correct vacuum there and that the line from there to the accumulator is tight and not kinked or pinched.
The line running to the left from the bottom of the “tree” is the ATC line to the accumulator. The rest are manifold vacuum for the brakes and other sensors/accessories. Make sure these are tight as well before testing and that any leaks are also taken care of. Disconnecting and testing from here will check to make sure that the engine is producing the required vacuum.
“I have vacuum going to and from the accumulator.... Now what????”
Well, as long as we’re in the engine compartment, there’s one more thing to check.
The heater valve has several vacuum connectors of which the two lines ( green and orange) connect to a thermal valve that keeps the Autotemp II from coming on until engine temperature reaches at least 125 degrees.... but not only when your asking for heat. Even when asking for A/C, that vacuum switch needs to be air tight. If not th system will not come on.
This is the heater valve. Just below the vacuum motor of the heater valve, is the switch which is held to the heater valve by two small Phillips head screws. Between the valve and the switch is a rectangular rubber seal. At this stage, that seal has been through countless heating and cooling cycles and as much as 45 years. You may want to change it or at least remember that this is critical to getting the Auto temp to come on.