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One of the most aggravating problems with a car, especially in the summer, is cooling failure. There are a number of causes, some obvious, some not so obvious.
Check out:
Coolant level: check at the radiator if possible, not just the reservoir. It may need to have the air bled from the system.Some cars have bleeder screws on the top of the radiator or high point in the cooling system; some are just a pain in the neck to bleed. After you think it's full, run it long enough for the thermostat to open, and watch for bubbles. Keep topping up until the bubbles stop coming. If there is an air leak anywhere in the system, it will suck in air when cooling, rather than the coolant from the reservoir. In other words, the reservoir can be full but the engine and radiator are not necessarily full. NOTE ON AUDI'S 85-
Radiator: should be uniformly hot when car running. Cold spots can indicate clogs.
Coolant: For cars with aluminum heads or engines (many European and Japanese cars) we recommend coolant meeting Mercedes specifications. We have seen too many aluminum heads-
TIP: When adding water to coolant, use distilled if you plan on keeping the car. Distilled is not that expensive, is readily available, and import cars don't use that much of it. It won't make any difference now, but it will later! (Thanks to David Doiron)
Airflow through the radiator-
Electric fan: if fitted-
Hoses: may collapse, or have cracks or pinholes which are not obvious
Thermostat: some cars can cool OK without a thermostat, most do not flow properly. The thermostat is a flow control as well as a heat gizmo. Most thermostat recommendations are fairly high temperature, as the factories want them to come off of cold start as quickly as possible. In hot climates, it might be OK to go to a colder thermostat. Remember that when the thermostat is fully open, all thermostats flow the same amount of fluid. If your car requires a thermostat with an extra plate on the bottom, make sure that the replacement has the plate of the proper diameter. This controls another coolant passage. The little "jiggle valves" are there to help trapped air escape. On Nissan and Toyota, some models require a thermostat that has its working guts offset to fit correctly in its housing. On VW Rabbit-
Radiator cap: check for cracks on the seals. The typical failure pattern is for the car to spit out hot fluid and bubbles when you come to a stop, or turn the car off, when it's hot. The temp gauge often doesn't get over 3/4, not even to the "red", but it can still be scary with the steaming and spitting. Cars with reservoirs usually have caps with rubber seals both at the bottom and at the top, right under the top lid. Some vehicles with reservoirs have a pressure cap on the reservoir and a flat filler cap on the radiator (example: Volvo, Jaguar).
Water pump: It's tempting to blame the water pump when a car overheats, but this is not real common. Try to find a way to see if the water is actually moving. If the radiator is hot, the pump is probably working. Once in a while a pump will shear off an impeller (the little finned thing that actually moves the water) and appear normal from the outside, but this is rare. Usually a bad water pump will leak through the little weep hole in the side of the casting (don't try to plug this, it will just force the water in the bearing), or the bearing will be obviously bad-
Fan Clutch: A wiggly fan that looks like a dying water pump could be a dying fan clutch. Fan clutches come in several varieties; most are viscous drive like a little torque converter. They should be fairly firm at idle and low speeds. and as the airflow hitting the fan blade drives it with more force than the engine does, it declutches and freewheels, eliminating fan noise and slightly increasing gas mileage. German and some other viscous-
Thermal fan switches: Cars with electric fans or magnetic fan clutches have fan switches, usually in the radiator, sometimes on the engine. Most are fairly large with a two-
Timing-