coolant leak
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coolant leak
I have a coolant leak that only leaks when the car is cooled off and sitting. (91 Legacy Turbo). There is some dried coolant on top of the driver's side head. Anyone heard of this? thanks
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- Third Gear
- Posts: 619
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- Location: portland OR
well a lot of us have heard of something like it. a lot of time when the motor heats up and radiator hoses and metal in general expand they seal the leaks which was probably just a pin hole.
if you have some pics that will help a lot....... also a good way of diagnosing it would be to let your car cool over night. and then start it early in the morning before the day heats up. or just make sure the motor as cold as its gonna get, and then start it and go and see if you can see a leak.
its probably just a loose hose clamp or connection of some sort
if you have some pics that will help a lot....... also a good way of diagnosing it would be to let your car cool over night. and then start it early in the morning before the day heats up. or just make sure the motor as cold as its gonna get, and then start it and go and see if you can see a leak.
its probably just a loose hose clamp or connection of some sort
-93 2.2T (RIP), 93 N/A best car on earth.
-00 legGT, 18" PIAA sport mesh wheels, front/rear Rallitek sways, lowered whitelines, coming soon: 2.5L sti internals, 20g heads P&P, twin charged. motor is almost ready to go in.
Andrew
-00 legGT, 18" PIAA sport mesh wheels, front/rear Rallitek sways, lowered whitelines, coming soon: 2.5L sti internals, 20g heads P&P, twin charged. motor is almost ready to go in.
Andrew
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- Vikash
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If you've recently replaced the reservoir, check the clamps on the hoses. The clamps are tighter on hot hoses than on cold ones because hot ones are larger.
But also, check the radiator cap. It's good practice to replace the cap every once in a while, so if you didn't buy a new one when you bought a new filler tank, I say buy one now. When you install it, lubricate the rubber gaskets on it with coolant to help keep them from tearing.
But also, check the radiator cap. It's good practice to replace the cap every once in a while, so if you didn't buy a new one when you bought a new filler tank, I say buy one now. When you install it, lubricate the rubber gaskets on it with coolant to help keep them from tearing.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212
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- Vikash
- Posts: 12517
- Joined: Sun Nov 03, 2002 2:13 am
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It's not a last-straw kind of thing -- you should replace your radiator cap if you don't know when it was last replaced.
If replacing the cap doesn't solve the leak, you can do a pressure test. But don't do a pressure test if you don't know that the cap is good, because the pressure test doesn't test the cap.
If replacing the cap doesn't solve the leak, you can do a pressure test. But don't do a pressure test if you don't know that the cap is good, because the pressure test doesn't test the cap.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212