Dec-14-2020 07:17 PM
Dec-31-2020 09:49 AM
fred42 wrote:
Perhaps one of you could help me understand if someone has mixed the yellow and green. If so, I should replace. I can see green on the top of the gold.
Dec-30-2020 02:23 PM
Dec-30-2020 12:30 PM
Dec-30-2020 10:07 AM
Dec-18-2020 05:10 AM
NRALIFR wrote:
For those who do your own coolant flush and fills, a good tool to have when it’s time to refill the system is a coolant lift. As complex as the plumbing can be on an engine nowadays, it almost impossible to get all the air out of some areas without one.
They can also be used to check for leaks, as they can pull a vacuum strong enough to flatten the big radiator hoses. Some leaks will show up better with vacuum than pressure.
I’ve got a UView Airlift, but there are other brands available.
:):)
JoeH wrote:
When you get ready to drive it, top it off then.
But, I would also look at the "overflow" container as well as the cap. On my F-53, that canister is pressurized and I had a cap go bad which resulted in lost coolant. A few years latter, the actual canister developed a crack which also caused a fluid loss.
Dec-18-2020 03:33 AM
Dec-18-2020 03:00 AM
Dec-17-2020 06:04 PM
jeromep wrote:JRscooby wrote:
Unless you where checking the pressurized part of the system when it was cold, you where gambling. Engine gets up to temp, coolant expands, forcing some into the tank. Then as it cools/contracts it is drawn from the tank to keep full. But a leak that can let air in means the tank can stay full but the system gets low.
In the OP's case, where the engine is setting and maybe slowly bleeding, the level can drop enough to let engine rapidly overheat when started, and the gauge never read hot because the sending unit is dry.
And that is why I got it schedueled into a mechanic for service as soon as I discovered it. Maybe I should have been more specific, but any in-between driving I did with it was to a scheduled generator service appointment which had been booked a few weeks before I discovered the leak, and then to the shop that handled the radiator.
I'm not sure about your neck of the woods, but getting an appointment for any kind of mechanical service has about a 2-week lead time under current conditions, except for things like oil changes, tire changes, and basic maintenance. Anything deeper than that has a pretty significant lead time. The local generator specialist had nearly a 2 week lead time when I started with them, and the mechanic I went to also had about a 2 week lead time when this issue occurred.
All of this really blew a hole in our late summer, early fall, camping possibilities.
Dec-17-2020 05:21 PM
Dec-17-2020 05:13 PM
JRscooby wrote:
Unless you where checking the pressurized part of the system when it was cold, you where gambling. Engine gets up to temp, coolant expands, forcing some into the tank. Then as it cools/contracts it is drawn from the tank to keep full. But a leak that can let air in means the tank can stay full but the system gets low.
In the OP's case, where the engine is setting and maybe slowly bleeding, the level can drop enough to let engine rapidly overheat when started, and the gauge never read hot because the sending unit is dry.
Dec-17-2020 08:29 AM
jeromep wrote:
I had a slow, "fillable", coolant leak this summer. For a couple short trips I filled the reserve tank to compensate for the leak, but any time I got the rig up to temperature, I'd see the leak under the rig after I parked, presumably directly below where the compromise existed, and the leak would only really occur when the system was at pressure. Once the engine had cooled off and pressure had returned to atmospheric levels, the leak would disappear. But the reserve tank always told the true story because it was always low on the old marker when the engine was cold.
I refilled my overfill tank with straight coolant (older 460 V-8, so old tech), just to make sure I didn't run low or overheat. I added much less than a half gallon over the few weeks I had to run with the leak, which shouldn't have messed significantly with the coolant/water ratio, much.
Took the rig into a mechanic, and after a rather expensive total radiator replacement, no leak, as it should be.
Dec-17-2020 06:56 AM
Dec-16-2020 03:27 PM
Dec-16-2020 03:09 PM