On a 4106 the AC drives from a PTO off the Torus fan,but you can pull the drive and plate over it, the pump you are calling it (Torus drive) has to stay for the engine cooling fan, now the hyd part I never saw on a 4106 those were usually dc fan motors
Hi there, I am removing my OTR AC on my 1964 GM 4106. Im installing a mini split system, and I want to utilize the condenser bay for the outdoor unit (multi-zone unit) of the mini-split. So I am removing everything from that bay.Good use of space. Are you keeping the OTR heater?The cooling fan on the condenser coil/radiator is hydraulic. From reading the manual it seems like it's run from an engine driven hydraulic pump. Is that all that the pump drives? Am I safe to disconnect the fan motor and drain the system?Yes, the hydraulic pump next to the A/C compressor on the driver's side of the engine is only for the condenser cooling fan up front, so removing it is not an issue for what you're planning. The coach's power-assisted steering is handled by another pump on the alternator end of the 8V71.Anything else I should know when Im removing the AC lines and condenser coil?Lots of copper in than condenser coil - should be able to get some $$ for it at your local metal recycler.
Highly recommend that you keep the OTR heater - nothing can match it, or the defroster. Just be sure to clean the filter - it's located behind a door on the passenger side in the compartment between the RF wheel and the fuel filler.BTW, what's the VIN on your coach? PD4106-XXXX? Jon Ulse is keeping a list of all the "surviving" 4106s, I can pass the info to him.FWIW & HTH. . .