Alpinejim
Active Member
- Posts
- 242
- Location
- Sunny Suffolk
Hi everyone. Sorry, this is a long one, but please read.
I know there are loads of posts about this and coolant loss in general but I am truely stumped and I need some new ideas.
I bought this 2004 TD5 with a known overheating problem but I was happy to fix it myself.
Based on the symptoms of pressurised hoses, I went straight in with a new head gasket, water pump, tank cap and thermostat. The old gasket looked ok but the shop that did the pressure test said there was a very fine crack between two valves IIRC and that it shouldn't be a major problem. There was also a leak from the bung under the exhaust manifold which was re-sealed.
The engine was rebuilt and seemed fine, no more pressure in the hoses and no coolant loss to speak of. I took it to southern France and bar a small coolant top up there were no problems at all.
Back home and a couple of months later I was towing an empty trailer for an hour when the top road hose popped. I believed it was due to a degraded hose and replaced it. I tried the same trip again and at nearly the exact same location, after an hour, the same hose blew again.
I replaced the hose again and checked all other hoses. I found some weeping and cleaned and refitted them. I did a sniffer test for exhaust gasses in the coolant but got nothing on any of the 3 tests.
I have still been driving it whilst trying to diagnose the fault and checking for a warm lower rad hose (60 deg, I think, hard to measure exactly), is the heater working etc.
I found that the heater sometimes blows cold and I can hear bubbles rising behind the dash - probably air (steam?) in the system rising through the heat exchanger causing the loss of heat.
I have to ask, what pressure would be needed to pop a top rad hose? If I have a pressure leak or blockage and the coolant boils, surely that steam is not sufficiently high enough pressure to pop a hose? The coolant cap was also replaced and will squirt coolant out when too hot.
It's tempting to blame the fine crack on the head but I'm thinking more about the rad. Is it possible that it is blocking coolant flow to such a degree that coolant in the block is getting superheated, turning to steam and can pop a hose before the headertank can vent the pressure? The temp guage stays exactly at half way until I'm about to breakdown, no pre warning from that.
Any help from people who know how these things are supposed to work is appreciated.
I know there are loads of posts about this and coolant loss in general but I am truely stumped and I need some new ideas.
I bought this 2004 TD5 with a known overheating problem but I was happy to fix it myself.
Based on the symptoms of pressurised hoses, I went straight in with a new head gasket, water pump, tank cap and thermostat. The old gasket looked ok but the shop that did the pressure test said there was a very fine crack between two valves IIRC and that it shouldn't be a major problem. There was also a leak from the bung under the exhaust manifold which was re-sealed.
The engine was rebuilt and seemed fine, no more pressure in the hoses and no coolant loss to speak of. I took it to southern France and bar a small coolant top up there were no problems at all.
Back home and a couple of months later I was towing an empty trailer for an hour when the top road hose popped. I believed it was due to a degraded hose and replaced it. I tried the same trip again and at nearly the exact same location, after an hour, the same hose blew again.
I replaced the hose again and checked all other hoses. I found some weeping and cleaned and refitted them. I did a sniffer test for exhaust gasses in the coolant but got nothing on any of the 3 tests.
I have still been driving it whilst trying to diagnose the fault and checking for a warm lower rad hose (60 deg, I think, hard to measure exactly), is the heater working etc.
I found that the heater sometimes blows cold and I can hear bubbles rising behind the dash - probably air (steam?) in the system rising through the heat exchanger causing the loss of heat.
I have to ask, what pressure would be needed to pop a top rad hose? If I have a pressure leak or blockage and the coolant boils, surely that steam is not sufficiently high enough pressure to pop a hose? The coolant cap was also replaced and will squirt coolant out when too hot.
It's tempting to blame the fine crack on the head but I'm thinking more about the rad. Is it possible that it is blocking coolant flow to such a degree that coolant in the block is getting superheated, turning to steam and can pop a hose before the headertank can vent the pressure? The temp guage stays exactly at half way until I'm about to breakdown, no pre warning from that.
Any help from people who know how these things are supposed to work is appreciated.