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A/C Control 1990 Legacy L Wagon


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I'm waiting on a PDF copy of the factory service manual BUT, I am trying to get to the A/C control panel on my 90 Legacy wagon. I've read some other things about taking the top of the dash off. I see 2 screws on either side of the dash and I'm know there are more in the middle somewhere. I just can't see them. Any idea how many total screws there are? I want to take that control panel out and see if I can fix what I suspect are cold solder joints. Sometimes the air blows and sometimes it doesn't. The A/C compressor is unplugged until I can get it changed over to R134.

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Hey there, I'm sorry, don't remember where the screws are. Have you looked at YouTube?  There are many Subaru how-to's there. Nice because they are videos.

 

As for the A/C control.  Had my '90 down at the A/C repair shop having it serviced.  The guy came back and told me that I needed a new 'electronic control unit' and that the unit was $600.  Driving down the street with the A/C shop in the rear view mirror I started thinking.  The most detrimental stress on a car is 'cyclic loading'—the vibration from driving. Electronic components are soldered together; Solder has a lot of 'lead' in it; lead work hardens with vibration; hardened metal cracks because it is now brittle. So I drove up to my friendly 'car radio repair' guy. Al looked at it through his magnifying glass and told me that I had some cracks. Can you fix them? I asked. He said, "yes, I can re-solder the whole thing for $20.  I said, "you can't even buy dinner for you and you wife for $20." So I gave him $40. I've got close to 80,000 miles on that 'electronic control unit.'

 

Hope that helps.

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Hope I didn't send you on a wild goose chase, looking for a video—I'll try.

 

As for the intermittent functioning, that's what mine did.  The A/C would run get cold and stop.  It would get hot and the A/C would come on. I think the cracked solder would expand or contract with heat and cold.

 

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Looks like it was a goose chase... 1990 was before YouTube was invented.

 

Take a look at this; a couple of posts down:

 

http://legacygt.com/forums/showthread.php/can-replace-radio-head-unit-my-first-gen-wagoni-165289.html

Edited by gemologist
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This thread goes into detail of what this job takes and I beleive there is pictures showing where all the screws are.http://bbs.legacycentral.org/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=1142

 

 Looked at the pics and I'm going to jump on it tomorrow. I wanted to avoid breaking old, brittle, plastic things if I could. Cold and rainy here now not to mention late. Thanks! Will let you know how it goes.

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Hope I didn't send you on a wild goose chase, looking for a video—I'll try.

 

As for the intermittent functioning, that's what mine did.  The A/C would run get cold and stop.  It would get hot and the A/C would come on. I think the cracked solder would expand or contract with heat and cold.

 

///////////////////////////

 

Looks like it was a goose chase... 1990 was before YouTube was invented.

 

Take a look at this; a couple of posts down:

 

http://legacygt.com/forums/showthread.php/can-replace-radio-head-unit-my-first-gen-wagoni-165289.html

 

Hope I didn't send you on a wild goose chase, looking for a video—I'll try.

 

As for the intermittent functioning, that's what mine did.  The A/C would run get cold and stop.  It would get hot and the A/C would come on. I think the cracked solder would expand or contract with heat and cold.

 

///////////////////////////

 

Looks like it was a goose chase... 1990 was before YouTube was invented.

 

Take a look at this; a couple of posts down:

 

http://legacygt.com/forums/showthread.php/can-replace-radio-head-unit-my-first-gen-wagoni-165289.html

I've found some odd stuff on You Tube so it's always worth a look.

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I hate breaking plastic stuff too.

 

Here's one I learned by accident. You know how Armor-All makes old plastic shine—don't like that look. One day, trying to help some old plastic along in an area that was hard reach. Taking a 'chip' brush—natural fiber disposable paint brush—and cutting the bristles to about 3/8 an inch. Used it to lightly 'scrub' the Armor-All into the plastic. No Shine! Tried scrubbing other pieces, looked like new. Looking for a natural—soft-ish bristle finger nail brush, so it will be easier to work larger areas.

Edited by gemologist
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I'm waiting on a PDF copy of the factory service manual BUT, I am trying to get to the A/C control panel on my 90 Legacy wagon. I've read some other things about taking the top of the dash off. I see 2 screws on either side of the dash and I'm know there are more in the middle somewhere. I just can't see them. Any idea how many total screws there are? I want to take that control panel out and see if I can fix what I suspect are cold solder joints. Sometimes the air blows and sometimes it doesn't. The A/C compressor is unplugged until I can get it changed over to R134.

If you see a PDF copy of the factory shop manual on ebay, skip it. It's a poorly copied manual that can't be searched. Also, probably missing some material. I got my money back but just thought I'd throw that out there.

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  • 2 weeks later...

It works some & then it doesn't. Could this be the blower motor resistor being flaky? I really need this thing to blow air on really cold mornings. I can do without A/C till it gets warm but, I really need air to blow any time. I resoldered all the switches and thought I had it fixed then it went back to working  whenever it's "in the mood". When it doesn't work, none of the A/C buttons even light up. I saw a unit on ebay for $39.99 and didn't buy it because I thought mine was fixed. GRRRRRRRRR.

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  • 1 month later...

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