
Water in reservoir tank boiling!
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Water in reservoir tank boiling!
I noticed my car was making a weird noise, so I added some more water to the reservoir. The noise was gone, but after taking it on the highway for about 20 minutes, I came home and opened the hood to find that the water was boiling! Has anyone ever had this experience? Also, radiator fluid was spewing back into the water reservoir, and it was leeking from somewhere under the tank. I need help, i hope it's nothing major
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Danny
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What does your temp gauge say? I took my first car home with the coolant boiling in the reservoir, and it turned out that the fuse for the cooling fan was blown. So I'd look there first.
If it's not boiling (percolating, sounding like a coffee machine), and it's bubbling slowly (foaming) then uh-oh, you probably have a blown head gasket
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If it's not boiling (percolating, sounding like a coffee machine), and it's bubbling slowly (foaming) then uh-oh, you probably have a blown head gasket

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I did the same thing - got some pics if you want to see them - assuming I can find them
I think the parts were around $100 - I got the gaskets from the Subaru dealership. It really isn't that bad if you take your time - you don't even have to pull the engine if you don't want to.
Also I would recommend having the heads planned at machine shop (a friend of mine that worked at a Subaru dealership recommend it). Mine only cost $30 a head.
You do want to make sure the heads didn't warp and/or crack. Again my friend knew where to look for the normal places where the heads crack - the machine shop would take care of any minor warping.

Also I would recommend having the heads planned at machine shop (a friend of mine that worked at a Subaru dealership recommend it). Mine only cost $30 a head.
You do want to make sure the heads didn't warp and/or crack. Again my friend knew where to look for the normal places where the heads crack - the machine shop would take care of any minor warping.
Joe
Ex-'90 Legacy LS
Ex-'90 Legacy LS
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Usually you have a connection between:
Combustion and Coolant (which can be tested) (causing damage to cylinder wall)
Combustion and Oil (which causes oil starvation and screws the engine)
Water and Oil (very rear, unless cracked)
Id check the cylinder wall in the leaking cylinder. Water washes the oil away and causes damage. You may have to get a new head worse case.
Combustion and Coolant (which can be tested) (causing damage to cylinder wall)
Combustion and Oil (which causes oil starvation and screws the engine)
Water and Oil (very rear, unless cracked)
Id check the cylinder wall in the leaking cylinder. Water washes the oil away and causes damage. You may have to get a new head worse case.