by blueg33 » Sat Oct 26, 2013 12:57 pm
Right some help please
I have replaced a coolant pipe to the rad as it was weeping at the t piece to the heater. I put the front of the car up on ramps and removed the hose, about 1 litre of coolant came out, and the level in the rad was low enough for me to remove the otter switch, apply thread sealinng tape and re install without more than a dribble of collant coming out.
Hoses all reconnected
drive car of the ramps
Jack the rear as high as possible
Start filling the coolant tank, after about third of a litre the haeder tank is full
Go to front of car open rad bleed, aier rushes out until i get a steady flow of coolant - close rad bleed
Top up coolant tank about 1/5th of a litre
Open thrmostat bleed, steady flow
Warm engine until fans cut in (coolant cap on)
Coolant has gone down a bit - top up
Open rad bleed - tiny bit of air then a steady flow
Open thermostat bleed - steady flow
Lower back of car
Short drive to warm back up, gets up to temp, fans kick in heating is working
Check header tank - empty
Undo (slowly) header tank cap, pressure release and some coolant comes back up but header tank not full
Top up header
Raise rear of car
open rad bleed - consant flow
open thermostat bleed - constant flow
Header tank level still as before
I get the feeling there is still air in the system, my guess is tha the hot coolant compressed the air hence emptying the headrer tank and when the cap was released the release of pressure meant that the air pushed some coolant back into the header tanks.
I think that I haven't put in enough coolant so ther emust be air, but both bleeds just flow coolant (coolant doesnt flow from the bleeds when the header tank cap is on, so I think this means that the system is air tight.
Any hints and tips please/advice
I want to use the car tomorrow moring for a 2 hour trip, but dont want to damage it if there is air in the system.
Thanks in advance
Ginetta G33, TVR Tuscan, Audi A6 Quattro, Subaru Outback. Blue GTA Turbo
"If everything feels under control, you are not going fast enough" - Mario Andretti