Heating: a question *solved?!* - Printable Version +- babyRR.com - The Range Rover Evoque Forum (https://babyrr.com/forum) +-- Forum: Range Rover Evoque Discussions (/Forum-Range-Rover-Evoque-Discussions) +--- Forum: General (/Forum-General) +--- Thread: Heating: a question *solved?!* (/Thread-Heating-a-question-solved) |
Heating: a question *solved?!* - dandavis1 - 14-01-2012 04:39pm So I'm finding the Evoque's heating a bit inadequate, especially when the weather drops to 3C or lower. I've even measured the air temp coming out of the vents when on "HI" and the fan on full to see if it matches other cars (50C by the way). But here's my question about the heating - correct me if I'm wrong. Imagine the engine is hot, but the cabin is cold. I get in and drive off with the heating set to 22. I would expect the vents to expel air at maximum temp until the cabin reaches 22C when it would then automatically reduce the temp to keep the cabin at that level. But in the Evoque, selecting 22 seems to just cause cooler air to blow. Am I missing something?! Does the figure on the dash refer to the desired temp of the cabin, or the temp of the air coming out of the vents? Also, on a slightly different matter, when the engine is cold I find warm air blows for about 10secs after starting the engine, then it goes cold. Where's that warm air coming from? I'm beginning to wonder if it should blow hot even when the engine is cold, but my car has a fault... RE: Heating: a question - slee18 - 15-01-2012 07:04am Sounds like you need to take it back and have the dealer look at it. The temps here in the US get that low but I don't have that problem. RE: Heating: a question - dandavis1 - 15-01-2012 10:01am I've actually done that already. They say they can't see a problem... RE: Heating: a question - cjfp - 15-01-2012 10:10am My seats take a bit longer than I would like to warm up, but my blowers are fine. RE: Heating: a question - Claud - 15-01-2012 05:03pm it will be a cold start for me tomorrow, I will up the temp to high once engine is warm and see if I get hot air out of the vents. RE: Heating: a question - griff - 15-01-2012 05:06pm Are you using climate control on auto or on manual. I find in auto climate control I have no problem RE: Heating: a question - XFullFatTim - 15-01-2012 08:31pm Actually the numbers in all Range Rovers are just numbers they are not temperatures that you can set, however also check that the driver and passenger side are set to IIRC 6degrees of each other otherwise the system cannot cope with the two side being at larger temperature differences RE: Heating: a question - barnsyuk - 16-01-2012 08:38pm Thought I read somewhere the heater was a ceramic unit, heating immediatley and not depentant on engine coolant temperature. Can someone confirm this? RE: Heating: a question - Claud - 16-01-2012 09:57pm I turned my heating up to high with fan on max momentarily at traffic lights today and the HVAC pumped out hot air from all the vents, as one would expect after the engine had warmed up, ambient was -1 deg C. The HVAC kept the whole interior clear of mist at 20 deg C setting on auto from total iced car defrost. Wing mirrors were also clear for the whole journey this time. Heated screen cleared in about a minute from start. The Evoque does have a ceramic heater that functions while the car is in the warm up cycle to warm the cabin, i believe this turns off when there is sufficient engine heat. Unfortunately this is not detailed in the manual so we need someone with inside knowledge to confirm the functionality. RE: Heating: a question - blacktrees1 - 17-01-2012 07:49am (16-01-2012 08:38pm)barnsyuk Wrote: Thought I read somewhere the heater was a ceramic unit, heating immediatley and not depentant on engine coolant temperature. Can someone confirm this? Yes, It is called a PTC. It's only on (newer?) diesels. Because modern diesels create relatively little waste heat, you need another way of heating the cabin effectively. So you have these as a kind of auxiliary heater rather than just using excess engine heat. PTC stands for positive temperature coefficient. It uses a material (usually ceramic) with a PTC. The electrical resistance of the material varies with temperature in such a way that the heater turns off inherantly (no switch required) when a certain temperature is reached. |