1998 DI running hot in traffic!
#1
1998 DI running hot in traffic!
Hey all,
Just happily joined the LR ranks a few hours ago. 1998 discovery w/ 129k on the clock. I'm very happy with her, the fact that she passed a pre-buy inspection by a very good LR mechanic, and that everything on the car works.
... except maybe the cooling system.
In bad traffic (Los Angeles, anyone? ) I noticed the temp gauge ticking ever closer to red. It'd go down when I'd rev hard (higher revs = more revs of the coolant pump? Or greater speed = more air over the radiator?). I never let her go passed the high "safe" mark, but I did have to run the heater full blast on the last few blocks home.
Help?
Just happily joined the LR ranks a few hours ago. 1998 discovery w/ 129k on the clock. I'm very happy with her, the fact that she passed a pre-buy inspection by a very good LR mechanic, and that everything on the car works.
... except maybe the cooling system.
In bad traffic (Los Angeles, anyone? ) I noticed the temp gauge ticking ever closer to red. It'd go down when I'd rev hard (higher revs = more revs of the coolant pump? Or greater speed = more air over the radiator?). I never let her go passed the high "safe" mark, but I did have to run the heater full blast on the last few blocks home.
Help?
#2
#3
Well in the mechanic's defense he didn't drive or run the car long enough to overheat her, it takes quite a while. Otherwise the inspection was absurdly thorough and I was very impressed. Not to mention drooling over the fleet of tricked out defenders parked in their lot.
After she cooled down I bled the coolant system with the heaters on full blast and definitely got some bubbles out of her. Let the truck idle for a while and monitored the temp gauge, which stayed at a about the 1/3 mark the entire time, as well as for a quick spin around town.
And yes, I recall some burbling fluid noises from the pass side under the dash. Bubbles in the heater core, I assume?
After she cooled down I bled the coolant system with the heaters on full blast and definitely got some bubbles out of her. Let the truck idle for a while and monitored the temp gauge, which stayed at a about the 1/3 mark the entire time, as well as for a quick spin around town.
And yes, I recall some burbling fluid noises from the pass side under the dash. Bubbles in the heater core, I assume?
#5
#6
The fan clutch feels okay, it turns a little more freely than the one did in my BMW, but there is definitely resistance when turning it...
I heard the e-fans run for a while after shutting the engine down. Testing further I saw that only the left side fan ran when I hit the A/C switch (Is it designed to work this way or is the right side fan not functioning correctly?). The engine wasn't warm for that test, as I was only verifying whether the fans functioned at all.
After bleeding the system she ran at 1/3 mark the entire drive to work today, with a decent portion of that drive in traffic. However, it is noticeably cooler today than it was yesterday, so obviously that could be a factor.
I heard the e-fans run for a while after shutting the engine down. Testing further I saw that only the left side fan ran when I hit the A/C switch (Is it designed to work this way or is the right side fan not functioning correctly?). The engine wasn't warm for that test, as I was only verifying whether the fans functioned at all.
After bleeding the system she ran at 1/3 mark the entire drive to work today, with a decent portion of that drive in traffic. However, it is noticeably cooler today than it was yesterday, so obviously that could be a factor.