start by shutting off the large gate valves in engine compartment.
What are you going to do for a windshield defroster? Or, are you leaving that heater core up in the dash?
Bad move if he removes the dash heat
If the big valves in the engine room are closed, there is no hot coolant flowing anywhere forward, so no dash heat either.You must cap the lines leading to the big heat exchanger, and maintain the lines that branch off to continue the journey to and from the dash. Work backwards from the very edge of the heat exchanger connections to figure out a good place to cap them.Both of those exchangers, heat and AC, will get you some proper scrap money.Happy coaching!Buswarrior
We love our toasty oem otr heat at dash (defroster) & cabin...
As far as the heat goes. I was/am pretty sure those big valves in the engine room are closed. My logic, if there is a problem if I open them, I will be cold on the side of the road. If I leave well enough alone and don't touch them I will still be cold, but at least still moving.
Seb -So here's what you do if the coach is road-worthy: Before cutting anything out, or otherwise dismantling the heating system, take the bus out for a short local drive, five to ten miles is sufficient, basically enough to get everything up to operating temperature. Once you're back in your driveway, shut the engine off for a minute, go back and open the gate valves, then fire up the engine again, put it in fast idle, and go back inside to turn on the heating system, including the defroster. (Don't forget that valve at the floor by your left heel!) Get out of the coach and start checking all the coolant line's routing, looking for leaks. If you don't find any, well, now you know you've got a defroster that works. If you do find some leaks, you're in your driveway, not cold on the side of the road. KISS principle!!FWIW & HTH. . . RJ