There is no need to remove the inner roof (headliner) at all. If you had followed my instructions you would have been fine and yes, there are 10 Phillips headed threaded screws that secure my roof and yours too obviously. Every other one on the inside The shorter ones secure the headliner to the ROPS structure, the longer ones go through the headliner and ROPS to secure the roof which has huck style threaded inserts in it.
I hope your dealer and you have a good working relationship and you have instructed him as to your wishes because if you forced the roof and cracked it where the huck fastener goes in the inner panel, the ONLY cure it to either fiberglass the crack and reseat the insert or replace the entire roof and the Roof, for mine at least is $1800.00
Just because the blower and fan 'looks' clean don't mean the HX which is enclosed in the housing is clean. You cannot see that without removing ALL the screws that secure the upper housing to the lower housing and unplugging all the Molex connectors and even then access is limited (again, in my instructions on OTT.) The most access you will get without serious plumbing work will br about 6 inches but that is more than adequate to clean the HX, again using my instructions on OTT.
Good luck. You will need it and maybe a good bank balance.
You should never force anything, especially a plastic roof panel. The roof comes right off once you remove ALL the long screws.
My dealer (Carleton Farm Supply) does not stock the filter for your unit in activated carbon, only pleated paper. I called them yesterday.
Yesterday, I tried my luck at dropping the "Inner Roof", not too bad, but still awkward to do.
SNIP, SNIP
When I had to roof off, the blower fan looked pretty darned clean, so maybe the rest of it is OK.
That's my story !
Tim, my hat's off to you for trying to take it apart and get to things. With plastic parts and the occasional snap connectors it is hard to know the first time through just what you are dealing with. Taking off the inside door panels on new cars is good training.... Better yet, is talking to someone who has done it before.
I'm a pretty good mechanic, but I made my share of mistakes getting there. Still do.
I wonder if a person could make up their own activated charcoal filters? Seems easy enough to do. Activated charcoal is an inexpensive very fine powder and messy, but not hazardous to work with. It's used everyday in everything from toothpaste to emergency rooms. You can even buy it in molded block form for water filters at HD.
rScotty
Thanks for checking on the filter for me. I just now went ahead and ordered a replacement. A charcoal one would have been nice.
When I pulled out the old one, it was literally caked with dirt and crude. I tried to blow it out without success since it was so nasty. I will just wait and put the new filter in when it arrives.
Typical, The filter is washable in a bucket of suds and air dry (naturally). The issue with a clogged filter is, the ac (and heat) fan unit will pull in air (vacuum) from wherever it can and it's unfiltered so it loads the HX even faster. I clean my cab filter (outboard) and my inside screen (on the back, above your head often during the summer hay months).
I was so close getting to the HX in the roof, but it appeared to me that I was going to have to disconnect the A/C pressure lines. The cover didn't look it would open up with just removing bolts, screws and clips.
No, you don't. If you followed my instructions and removed all the screws, released the side clips and removed the Molex connectors, it's quite possible to raise the outer end of the fan shroud enough to access the ac HX. You can raise it about 6" without compromising the ac hardlines or the heater core hardlines.. I raise min, prop it up with a 6" wood prop and clean the HX with Zep in my garden sprayer, followed by a multiple clear water rinse. The accumulated crud flows out the condensate drains. Hardest part is removing the 16 screws and various Molex plugs.
I know a brand new roof for my B3000 is around $1,500. I was able to push that Huck fastener back in and when I gently tightened up on the bolt, it "seemed" to hold. There was a little tear on the edge of the hole the fastener went in to. I am hoping that having just one fastener messed up won't compromise the entire roof structure.
It wont. I've had to fiberglass mine everywhere the huck inserts are because all of them (with the exception of the front and rear ones cracked. I'm not about to buy a new roof, I'm too cheap.
If I have to, I will order a new roof and consider it a hard learned lesson on my lack of mechanical abilities. Time will tell.
Thanks for your help.
Tim, my hat's off to you for trying to take it apart and get to things. With plastic parts and the occasional snap connectors it is hard to know the first time through just what you are dealing with. Taking off the inside door panels on new cars is good training.... Better yet, is talking to someone who has done it before.
I'm a pretty good mechanic, but I made my share of mistakes getting there. Still do.
I wonder if a person could make up their own activated charcoal filters? Seems easy enough to do. Activated charcoal is an inexpensive very fine powder and messy, but not hazardous to work with. It's used everyday in everything from toothpaste to emergency rooms. You can even buy it in molded block form for water filters at HD.
rScotty
I bought activated charcoal air conditioning filter pads from eBay. 24x30” and about 1/4” thick. Cut them and place a piece on top of the mini split intake as a prefilter. For about $10 got at least a 5 year supply. If they don’t come in a sealed plastic bag and aren’t stored in sealed bag don’t bother.
Got them to trap and hold radon thru the decay cycle to lower exposure. Lack the equipment to properly monitor or test if it makes a difference. Makes me feel better.
Even my vacuum has a carbon prefilter.