>I've seen the vacuum resivoir behind the heater box split at a seam before,
>there's also a tangle of vac hoses behind the center console, one of them
>may have split or popped off. It should hold a vacuum well, though there's a
>fair amount of air to evacuate and if any of the buttons are pushed a vac
>solenoid will suck in so you may have to pump for a while but it should
>hold.
Thanks, James. I was hoping that you would respond. Just knowing that
the system _SHOULD_ hold a vacuum is a great starting place for me.
I did try 'pumping' the system quickly with the Mityvac but it rapidly
returned to "0" vacuum. Looks like it is time to lay on the floor
again. The Mityvac should make it an easy matter to isolate the
problem. The various vacuum motors are operating as I can get defrost
and recirculation changes... we shall see...
__ __
Randy & \ \/ /alerie's
\__/olvos
'90 245 Estate - '93 965 Estate
"Shelby" & "Kate"
Mike F - 12 Sep 2005 14:07 GMT
> Thanks, James. I was hoping that you would respond. Just knowing that
> the system _SHOULD_ hold a vacuum is a great starting place for me.
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> '90 245 Estate - '93 965 Estate
> "Shelby" & "Kate"
You can try to isolate the problem by moving the vacuum switches, which
will switch the "motors" out of the system, depending on switch
position. If the problem goes away with a switch in a certain position,
then you've narrowed the problem down to that leg of the system. If the
problem stays for all switch positions, then the problem is in the
vacuum supply side of the system.

Signature
Mike F.
Thornhill (near Toronto), Ont.
Replace tt with t (twice!) and remove parentheses to email me directly.
(But I check the newsgroup more often than this email address.)