SirRobyn0
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2019
- Posts
- 6,755
- Reaction score
- 11,402
- Location
- In the woods in Western Washington
- First Name
- Rob
- Truck Year
- 1984
- Truck Model
- C20
- Engine Size
- 305
Yes that's it. If you have a vac pump and put vac to it, it should be a few seconds of vac application before vacuum will go though it.Is the vac delay valve the little check valve looking thing in line to the vac switch. How would i test that. I took it off and it seemed like air only went through it one way
If you don't find anything external make sure to check the switches in the pan like some of the other guys have suggested.
I'll see if I can find the wiring diagram this morning at work at post it up, no guarantees I'm going to be able to locate it though. I will try.Yeah it helps. Im pretty sure ive got 3-4 lockup setup. I have the vac switch and delay valve,brake switch with no external 4th gear pressure switch. Its an 84 as well with no tcm,ecu etc. Pretty sure its 3 wire as well. I plan to mess with it tomorrow and see what else I can find. I cant find a replacement vac switch anywhere...even online. Im gonna try a few things that will help track down the culprit tomorrow.
That is exactly how my 84 works. 2nd and 3rd are vac controlled, 4th is any time it's in 4th.FWIW- My 1986 will only lock the TCC in 4th gear if there's no vacuum to the switch. That happens right after the 3-4 shift at 45+mph. I'm having some issues with vacuum lines and delay valves, so have had the switch connected directly to manifold vacuum. In that case, the TCC will engage in 3rd after I'm above 45 or 50mph, and will in 2nd if I'm holding it in that gear and exceed 45-50mph (fairly easy with 3.08 gears). Without the delay valve, the TCC will lock a bit sooner under light loads and unlock a bit earlier if manifold vacuum drops. My semi-educated guess is that the delay valve is there in part to keep the TCC from locking and unlocking rapidly under on throttle/off throttle driving conditions, though I need to check the color code on my delay valve to see what the actual time delay period is. Either way, it only fine tunes the lock and unlock a bit, and doesn't contribute hugely to the road speed at which things happen in my application.
Mine is Federal emissions with no computer (save for ESC).