Forced air vents set flush in the floor? They generally just lift straight out.
Air still in the vents or freshly-shut coils still contain heat for a short amount of time after turning off the power. Also, it could take a short amount of time for the fans blowing the air to slow down, even after cutting power.
Move the heat control lever to the off position.
leaking ducts allowing air into system.
shut all vents off so it comes out on floor
Laptops can give off a considerable amount of heat depending on the type of hardware they use. If the vents are blocked, they can produce enough heat to cause burns when touched.
it gives off a great deal of heat
give off heat
turn the heat 2 the highest as possible than rapidly change it to the coldest. the rapid change in heat should make them come out, if they die u may want to unscrew the blots and take the front off just dont lose the bolts.
U EITHER PUT SOME GUM ON A STICK OR A REAL STRONG AIR BLOWGUN OR TAKE APART THE EVAPORATOR CASE.
the top vents clip off, remove the stereo to get the ones there off and the ones near the doors are tough. to take off the left one off remove the bottom plastic under the steering wheel and the plastic to the left close to the fuse box the one that closes with the door it pops out. to take out the right one is harder you need to unscrew the glove compartment and unscrew the vents from there. Very Hard.
first u need a star screwdriver size 15....u need to take off all of the screws where the vents are then take the screws off under the vents...o yea there are screws on the side of the dash(u can get to them by opening the driver and passenger doors) and u need to take screws off in glove compartment
From the vents or from an AC line? If you're tracing your lines, and you feel heat coming off of the smaller lines, that's normal... refrigerants gets heated and superheated as it cycles.. the operation of AC is a series of heat exchanges.If you're getting it out of your vents, then there's a condition in your system which is preventing the AC system from providing sufficient cooling. It could be a number of reasons why, and AC diagnosis really isn't a do-it-yourself task.