Hi all,
I've been perusing the incredibly helpful grandprixforums for a while now, as I'm trying to learn more about my GTP and car work in general. I did my research on this problem but couldn't seem to find anything, so I'll go ahead and post for once! I'd greatly appreciate some advice.
So the A/C blower works fine. This is the digital, automatic control A/C, by the way. Temperature settings work fine. Driver/Pass dual works fine. Everything is great... until I go on a longer high-speed highway journey, say an hour or two. At some point along the way, the air will suddenly reduce to a trickle from the vents (both the driver and passenger vents stop working at the same time). Now, the blower doesn't stop - but I can hear the air getting lost behind the dash, it sounds like. So very little reaches the cabin through the vents. This is true whether hot or cold. Sometimes messing with the vent selector or temperature fixes it temporarily, sometimes not. Turning the car off for the night and coming back in the morning ALWAYS fixes it, unless I drive an hour or so again the next day.
This is also sometimes accompanied by a faint clicking or winding sound from behind the dash. I researched the A/C trouble codes and checked them - I've got 105 and 106, indicating historic faults in the Left and Right Electric Actuators. Sometimes the codes also become 05 and 06, indicating current faults.
I found replacement parts, and I read the write-up for replacing the doors here:
http://www.grandprixforums.net/blend...ent-21941.html
The only other reference to this issue I found, anywhere on the internet (!), was here:
AC/Heat Problems - Blower going, but no air from vents - Car Forums and Automotive Chat
So here's my question:
Don't the electric doors, the ones reported in the trouble code, control the mixing of hot and cold air? Would they really be responsible for the gradual loss of cabin airflow? The HVAC computer thinks so, yet it sounds like a vacuum issue, because it only occurs after prolonged driving at high speed = higher RPM = lower vacuum pressure, and because the driver and passenger are affected equally, and because there is otherwise no trouble with temperature blending. Has anyone experienced this problem or seen it as the result of those electric actuators vs. the vacuum system?
Thank you all for your advice and support of the community. It's one I hope to become part of and contribute to, if I ever learn what the hell I'm doing.
Komrad36