Nothing is ever easy on this damn thing. Turns out I was looking at the wrong wiring diagram. I don't have the "manual" a/c, I have the "automatic", so a bit more complicated.

The general connections for the a/c relay are basically the same, but none of the wire colors match.
As near as I can tell, the "push control unit" ie, the a/c button, is supposed to supply 12v to the thermo amplifier, ie the temp controller. The thermo amplifier provides GND to the pressure switch which passes that through the ECU and then on to the A/C relay. The thermo amplifier also provides 12v to the A/C relay.
If the A/C relay gets 12v AND GND, it closes and sends 12v to the compressor.
All of this is simple enough, but none of the wire colors match with any of the wiring diagrams I have, so tracing the wires is a nightmare. Also, when I push the A/C button, the relay clicks on, even if I have the pressure switch unplugged.
So, as near as I can tell, the A/C relay is getting GND from somewhere. I don't have the factory ECU anymore, so if I had wired it correctly, the pressure switch should be connected directly to the thermo amplifier. That doesn't appear to be the case, or at least the pressure switch is not connected to the A/C relay. So the pressure switch is not in the loop, and will have no effect on whether the compressor comes on or not.
When I started working on all of this, the compressor was getting 12v whenever the key was on, but was not connected to the A/C relay. I have no idea what I had it hooked up to, but obviously it was wrong.
Since the A/C button does activate the relay, I decided to just connect the compressor to the relay output and call it a day.
Gonna try and get a working compressor tomorrow from the junkyard.
If I get a working compressor the whole system should work. At that point, I'll see if the thermo amplifier is connected to the pressure switch. If it is at least providing GND to the switch, I can make the connection between the switch and the relay (they are near each other) and get that back into the loop.
The general connections for the a/c relay are basically the same, but none of the wire colors match.
As near as I can tell, the "push control unit" ie, the a/c button, is supposed to supply 12v to the thermo amplifier, ie the temp controller. The thermo amplifier provides GND to the pressure switch which passes that through the ECU and then on to the A/C relay. The thermo amplifier also provides 12v to the A/C relay.
If the A/C relay gets 12v AND GND, it closes and sends 12v to the compressor.
All of this is simple enough, but none of the wire colors match with any of the wiring diagrams I have, so tracing the wires is a nightmare. Also, when I push the A/C button, the relay clicks on, even if I have the pressure switch unplugged.
So, as near as I can tell, the A/C relay is getting GND from somewhere. I don't have the factory ECU anymore, so if I had wired it correctly, the pressure switch should be connected directly to the thermo amplifier. That doesn't appear to be the case, or at least the pressure switch is not connected to the A/C relay. So the pressure switch is not in the loop, and will have no effect on whether the compressor comes on or not.When I started working on all of this, the compressor was getting 12v whenever the key was on, but was not connected to the A/C relay. I have no idea what I had it hooked up to, but obviously it was wrong.
Since the A/C button does activate the relay, I decided to just connect the compressor to the relay output and call it a day.
The compressor is grounded through the case, so only the power wire is there. Once I got the wiring above done, I double checked to see if the compressor clutch would activate, and it did not. It was working before I swapped out the ECU and screwed with the wiring harness. My guess is that when I hooked up the compressor to a constant 12v source, it ran all of the time (without the system being charged) and I burned it up.Pull the connector off the compressor, put 12v on one side and ground on the other, see if the clutch actuates.
Gonna try and get a working compressor tomorrow from the junkyard.
If I get a working compressor the whole system should work. At that point, I'll see if the thermo amplifier is connected to the pressure switch. If it is at least providing GND to the switch, I can make the connection between the switch and the relay (they are near each other) and get that back into the loop.


