RRC83

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My temp gauge is showing some intermittent readings when driving, sometimes it's in the middle and a few minutes later it's near the red zone.
I decided to install a watertemp gauge instead of the clock and put sensors in the top and bottom hose. 20160222_202141.jpg 20160222_202132.jpg
After bleeding the system and fully warm the gauge shows close to 100 at the top and 60 ish at the bottom.
20160222_202228.jpg 20160222_202004.jpg
Rad, fan, viscous and pump are all new.
Being new to these engines, would petrol quality make these run hotter than normal? I filled up with 95, does it require 98?

Regards,
Rob
 

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I've got an 82 degrees thermostat in mine and measured with an infra red thermometer pointing at the thermostat housing it is pretty much spot on. My dash temperature gauge reads at the high end of normal but I'm assuming this is down to a poor earth or just an inaccurate gauge.
 
It doesn't require 98ron unless you have a cr over 10:1 which you won't in an 83 rrc.
Try a new stat, 82deg is correct for your car. Paddocks usually stock them
 
Thanks for the quick replies, will try a new stat. Wish I had checked it when I put the sensors in.

Cheers,
Rob
 
I think the fluctuations in temp. readings would be more of a concern to me, as 'stats usually either work or they don't.
Depending on the driving conditions, ie in traffic or at sustained speed, I suspect you have a coolant circulation problem, despite the new components fitted - an air lock possibly?
An '83 engine could have the 9.35cr (check eng. #) so although it should run on happily on 95RON you might have to play with the timing.
 
I was about to ask if there is a tried and tested method for bleeding the system. A bleedscrew would be handy.
@cooltide: by matrix, you mean the heatermatrix? O/S is 2468 cyl.bank?
Thanks,
Rob
 
Yes as you said, on the later models there are 2 metal water pipes from back of water pump over rocker cover to heater matrix. There is a plastic hex bleed screw on one of them. If the coolant is up to temp, the air will be pushed out automatically
 
Thanks cooltide.
20160222_203951.jpg This is what it looks like. And before anyone asks, I have no idea where that puddle of coolant comes from. All hoses are dry but I'll check again with a cold running engine.
Anyone know what this (hexbolt with pipe) is for? 20160202_203140.jpg
Thanks,
Rob
 
Can't make out what I'm looking at in second pic, what type of carbs do you have?. What I described must just be later efi set up. Do you have coolant pipes running under carbs leaking on to valley gasket? Or maybe split hose only sprays when hot and pressurised
 
Strombergs carbs.
20160222_204138.jpg This is the manifold from a spare engine but I am pretty sure this is what the underside looks like.
The hoses from pump to manifold to matrix are not new, I'll replace them and see if it cures the leak.
If it doesn't, next suspect is that freeze plug.
Cheers,
Rob
 
The pipe or the plug? Either way, the manifold has to come off. Not a job I'm really looking forward to, I removed it from the spare engine and all sorts of crap fell into the valley.
Maybe this time I should clean the top first.
 
The coolant pipe that is fixed to the underside of the inlet manifold in your picture. They do corrode.
 
Don't you just love classic cars. 1.5 hours with the spanners and it looks like this.
20160225_223321.jpg On a modern car your lucky if you can change a lightbulb in that amount of time.
Hot running mystery solved, stat is 88 degrees.
Coolant leak mystery also solved.
20160225_223753.jpg
That pipe clearly can't hold its water.
@cooltide, thanks for steering me in the right direction.
Cheers,
Rob
 

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