Best to not and try to reinvent the wheel. Your machine though.
Creighton
Obviously I don't want to do anything to damage the machine, I was just trying to be smart about getting it running.
Right now, there seems to be two main theories (could be more, haven't gone there yet) about what is going on with it.
One is pinhole leak, resulting in low freon. Or R-134 in this case, resulting in no cooling.
The other is a bad T-Stat, possibly stuck in cut-out mode or something like that, not allowing the unit to cool.
Using conventional thinking, I could order a T-Stat for $40 and shipping, and hope it fixes it, as I am sure it is non returnable. If it doesn't, out the $$ and still have my issue.
Or, I can pull the deck, (build the stand, etc) and take it to a pro for diagnosis and repair. If the system hasn't had/developed a leak, and it's the T-Stat, well, that was a lot of work and risk of further damage endured for nothing.
Slaving in a T-Stat seems to be the obvious first step, and after doing it it can quickly be called a good fix or ruled out. In my Air Force job we would do this all the time in troubleshooting. The cool part there was it was at no cost to us personally, and the supply system had no heartburn accepting back electrical parts in to the supply system. However, as a consumer, there is a monetary risk in this case.
The T-stat does something in the grand scheme of things, it either lets power go to some component under certain conditions, or takes power away. (If that's the case disconnecting it temporarily would serve the same purpose, to see the results)
I was simply trying to be smart, and see if I could quickly identify and confirm it as the culprit, or rule it out, that is all. I had no plans on letting the unit run for hours and hours, just long enough to see if it changed anything.
But before I acted, I wanted to float the idea around here to you folks who have much, much more experience on these units. I pictured possibly someone saying "yup, that's a real quick way to identify it if it is acting up", or even the flip side, "don't do that, and here is why...."
Bruce