How many of you guys have one and how did you set yours up i am curious, pics would be nice I will be working on mine this weekend, I found a water control valve that is electric as I thought this would make a very clean set up. I am trying to avoid putting holes in the firewall as much as possible. My present fuel line is in the way but I can turn the valve and make a new fuel line that will follow close to the firewall and not stick out from the sediment bowl.
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Heaters in your Model A
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I have added a side inlet casting with the threaded inlet for a heater, and I threaded the top outlet on the rear side for the coolant to go to the heater. Right now I just use a short heater hose to connect the two together, but plan to run hoses through the wood floorboards to the heater core. I was also thinking of having the heater core under the passenger side floorboard and just cutting a heater grate into the wood. This will not take away any interior space, which is already limited. I'm pretty sure this will be my final design. I don't plan to use a control valve, but will cover the grate when heat isn't needed.
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I have a vintage hot water heater on the shelf for future use. The fan motor is a no good. Will find a replacement for it some time and figure out how to hook it up after then. Also have 4 heater manifolds. Will need to bead blast and inspect for cracks as I have seen several of them cracked in recent years. The thought of cutting a hole in the firewall is a real drawback also. Rod"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past three decades, has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good." Thomas Sowell
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Rowdy my car has the autolite heater piece in the firewall already so am going to try to make a bulkhead fitting there so as not to cut more holes.
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Good idea if you already have a hole. No extra holes in the firewall for the delivery. Thinking a couple of AN structual bulkhead fittings through the floorboard will work fine. Will need to look up AN part numbers when I get to that point. Rod
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I was just sitting here thinking, I have a radiator from a motorcycle laying around that all it would need is a valve and hoses to mount under the car and a hole in the floor to allow the heat in. Kinda sounds like a heater to me. Probably wouldn't hurt to have some type of louver device inside the floor to adjust the amount of heat entering, but I think any hardware store heater duct door would work as a regulator.
Who knows, as an added benefit it could help cool the engine while warming the car!You wana look waaay far up da road and plan yer route because the brakes are far more of a suggestion than a command!
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Wiz Tom mentioned something like that as well,you may be on to something a scoop for the air would force feed the heat thru aheater duct like in your house could work . I already have a heater I will take some pics as I go about this so maybe we can come up with something to keep from cutting on the fire wall.
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So with me being new to this Model A thing and only driving mine off and on for a month now, it seems I have enough heat coming through the firewall to keep me from getting frostbite this winter. I haven't driven it yet with the top up to contain this heat either. And my windshield vibrates closed so I cannot keep the cool breeze coming in. How effective are the manifold heaters?
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Originally posted by Tom Wesenberg View PostI rode in the back seat of a 31 Town Sedan with a manifold heater, and on a 30* F. day I stayed nice and warm.
I just like the idea of a water heater so I don't have to cut a hole in the firewall, and the added cooling for the engine.3~ Tudor's & 1~ Coupe
Henry Ford said,
"It's all nuts and bolts"
"Start by doing what's necessary; then do what's possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible."
Mitch's Auto Service ctr
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Originally posted by BNCHIEF View PostThat is why I mentioned a scoop on the bottom like an air scoop working somewhat like the manifold heater does. Wiz talked about a motorcycle radiator they would be pretty compact.
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All my cars came with a hole in the firewall for a manifold heater, though only two had the proper manifold and only one had the proper cover. All three now have complete Autolite setups, and I drive them all through the Oregon winters, which are relatively mild, but boy howdy, it is cold in a A without one!Last edited by Ray Horton; 10-26-2017, 04:15 PM.
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No they make a bolt on for the modern manifold but when you google it and have a look then go to snyders and look up theirs and the directions it will give you a clear choice on the set-up you will have to cut a hole in the firewall as well for any heater but pictures will show it all to if you cannot come up with something i can get pictures for you.
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Here's my bypass hose until I install my heater core. I have a 180* thermostat and the bypass hose will circulate the block coolant for even heating of the block, until the thermostat opens.
Heater Hose.JPG
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A word of caution when using the manifold heaters. Mine looked perfect, and checked out with dye penetrating method. I bought a carbon monoxide detector powered by a 9 volt battery, and in 15 minuets of driving started going off.
I removed the the short hose, and heater cover, and no alarms.
I did have the manifold fold ground before I installed it with new copper gaskets, and torqued cold and then again hot.
I cant see any reason for the exhaust gas leakage.
I would suggest that that car users purchase a carbon monoxide detector, for winter (closed windows) driving.
Best Regards;
Brian French
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Originally posted by slammin View PostTom,
Where did you get the lower outlet set up for the hose fitting?
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Tom:
With the bypass hose the way you have it, aren't you essentially bypassing the radiator? I think you should plug the hose until you get a heater in there. In more modern cars the heater line is shut off when heat is not required. I can see where it would help before the thermostat opens though.1930 Sport Coupe, 1965 Lotus Elan
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Here's a heater I put under the front seat in my Sport Coupe. My son welded up the box and we cut down a later pickup heater core to fit. The air comes out at about 175°F. The outlets are air vents from a British sports car. There is a third outlet on the box which dumps some warm air under the seat as a seat heater. The picture by the transmission shows the heater contol valve to change the temperature. It us from an old Chrysler vehicle.You do not have permission to view this gallery.
This gallery has 7 photos.1930 Sport Coupe, 1965 Lotus Elan
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Originally posted by bettlesr View PostTom:
With the bypass hose the way you have it, aren't you essentially bypassing the radiator? I think you should plug the hose until you get a heater in there. In more modern cars the heater line is shut off when heat is not required. I can see where it would help before the thermostat opens though.
My car's radiator keeps the coolant at a good temp even with the bypass.
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by BNCHIEFOriginal Thread:
https://www.vintagefordforum.com/for...n-your-model-a
How many of you guys have one and how did you set yours up i am curious, pics would be nice I will be working on mine this weekend, I found a water control valve that is electric as I thought this would make a very clean set up. I am trying to avoid putting holes in the firewall...-
Channel: Cooling ~ Engine
10-20-2017, 08:45 AM -
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by BNCHIEFHere are some pics of the heater I installed in my car it is a 12v neg ground, mounted to a bulkhead plate I built, it uses a 3 speed fan, has a servo controlled 4 port water control valve all of this is inside the car behind the heater. This sets the heater 1.5" below the fuel tank and 3" in from the face of the tank there is adequate foot room under the heater, however I did put in two...You do not have permission to view this gallery.
This gallery has 11 photos.-
Channel: Model A Forum
11-12-2017, 08:10 AM -
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by BillEbobHow difficult is it to install a hot water heater in an “A?”
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Channel: Model A Forum
03-25-2019, 08:50 PM -
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by MitchI’m working on this 31 cp and it has a pretty nice heater set up. Someone installed this by defacing the firewall a bit with holes for the hoses and mountings. This same set up can be installed cleaner by cutting holes in the toe board for the hoses and mounted differently. It contains a small heater core with an internal fan controlled by a variable reostat switch. There are 3 adjustable flaps...You do not have permission to view this gallery.
This gallery has 10 photos.-
Channel: Model A Forum
12-03-2018, 10:23 PM -
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Here's a picture of the water outlet made by Hadees.
Below the heater fitting is a flat circle, which can be drilled and tapped for a temperature gauge.
I've never seen an outlet like this before.
I wonder if this was part of a kit that included the heater and return pipe?
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Channel: Model A Forum
09-05-2021, 11:09 PM -
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Does anyone know what this Arvin heater fits and what it might be worth ?You do not have permission to view this gallery.
This gallery has 2 photos.-
Channel: Model A Forum
01-15-2022, 04:53 AM -
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by BNCHIEFMy car came with an autolite heater and the manifold not sure if the manifold is good, is there a piece of flex pipe that goes between the heater and the door on the firewall.
Also I see a heater is also made for the stock manifold as well, mounting looks a little cheezy to me like it might be a real good vibrating noise maker,
Any small compact water heaters that would work...-
Channel: Model A Forum
10-03-2017, 09:18 AM -
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by Dave hummellLast November we were out cruising the back roads and after two hours she said she was getting cold and my hands were starting to feel the chill anyone ever install a hot water heater in their car? There is lots of time before snow season I could be running my car but the years of working outside have caught up to my hands and feet.
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Channel: Model A Forum
02-06-2021, 09:03 AM -
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by BNCHIEFThis is the bulkhead plate I made for the heater install I did, it is 3/16ths aluminum I mounted the heater to it because i did not want to poke holes in the firewall and this way I could use the existing holes there to mount this unit, following are some pics I took of the process, I was not able to use the sediment bowl for various reasons threads being just one of the issues.You do not have permission to view this gallery.
This gallery has 10 photos.-
Channel: Model A Forum
11-12-2017, 08:35 AM -
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by minutemantomHello All
My wife and I moved into a 20 year old house last spring. It has 2 car attached garage. The garage is well insulated. I keep my Model A and my mower in the garage. I would like to heat it when tinkering with my car. I am looking at a ventless gas heater. The info says it is safe for a garage if installed at least 24" of the floor. There is already a water heater installed in...-
Channel: Model A Forum
12-06-2020, 08:51 PM -
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