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J.Lo
5th January 2017, 10:36 PM
What would you do?

My 2004 td5 110 has an air conditioner that's given up the ghost. According to Ritters in Victoria it would cost about 2.5k to fix.

I now live in Perth and am considering painting the roof white to help keep things naturally cooler. Presently dark metallic red.

I do a bit of off-road and intend to keep doing so for a long time to come. Whilst in WA I'd like to do some desert tracks up north.

So the question is would you spend the 2.5k to have the air conditioner working again, or would you rip out everything other than the compressor and use it for pumping up your tires?

Cheers,
Jeff.

Grumbles
6th January 2017, 01:50 AM
Yes......without a doubt. The intangible daily benefits far outweigh the repair cost.

Perhaps also consider this too Jeff. Personal circumstances can change in the blink of an eye and selling it for expected or unexpected reasons in the future will be made easier and more profitable if the car is complete with all its systems in working order. Any car gutted of its factory a/c will likely turn many potential buyers away.

AK83
6th January 2017, 06:48 AM
And obviously it makes sense to get a second opinion too!
Did they give you a list of what's wrong?
Try chasing up the parts yourself too.

Judo
6th January 2017, 03:35 PM
Well you don't say what's wrong with it. If it's AC specific you might be better going to a small AC specialist, at least for a diagnosis and quote.

J.Lo
7th January 2017, 01:20 AM
They claimed the core was leaking. Must admit I've never understood why it would cost 2.5k to repair. Maybe an alternate quote should be my next move.

Judo
7th January 2017, 03:58 PM
It's possible the cost of a core through a workshop is pricey. Workshops don't have the luxury of spending time shopping around for the cheapest part like you do... If you confirmed the diagnosis of core, you could probably source your own and get it swapped out.

rick130
7th January 2017, 07:50 PM
When you say core, I'm guessing you mean evaporator ?

Get one out of the UK and swing some $$ a compliant fridgey's way.

I'm guessing it'd be a bastard of a job, you or you're compliant tradie will need a receiver/dryer, refrigerant, O rings, a dab of oil and dry nitrogen for pressure testing plus a bucket load of labour to pull the dash apart, fit and reassemble to complete but I'd do it.

Judo
7th January 2017, 07:57 PM
I thought the td5's (2004) were still the under dash units. Should be a lot easier than most vehicles yeah?

Good call on the drier. Still not a huge cost although all the little things will add up a bit.

rick130
7th January 2017, 08:25 PM
I thought the td5's (2004) were still the under dash units. Should be a lot easier than most vehicles yeah?

Good call on the drier. Still not a huge cost although all the little things will add up a bit.

If that's the case then yes.

Been twelve months since I've been in a DII, hell, it's been 6 months since I've been in any Land Rover. :angel: