Coolant boiling over thru reservoir after bleeding
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Coolant boiling over thru reservoir after bleeding
Guys - 01 Disco with 120K, had heads / gaskets done 5K miles ago, running fine ever since. Last week I lost heat and coolant was boiling over from the plastic reservoir. We figured a stuck thermostat. My mechanic / friend replaced that, bled the system a few times, let it run in the driveway for 30 min and all was fine. Next time I drove it, it did the same thing about 5 miles down the road. Had it towed, he bled the system for about an hour, let it run in the driveway for 45 min with no issues. Within 2 miles of a test drive, it did the same thing. We're going to do a compression check, but figured I'd throw it out there to see if you all had any ideas. No white smoke, no coolant in the oil, etc....it seems like it could be something simple versus the worst case scenario? Thanks -
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99 4.6 RR HSE trouble with radiator bleed
I am getting a little confused with all I am reading on bleed methods. I thought I had mine done and then it held for a few mins then shot up again. Do I do it stone cold? It is warm right now. Do I disconnect at the nipple and raise the tube heading to the overfill? Should the stream come out of the nipple end or out of the hose end? One time coolant came out the nipple, the other time it came out of the hose that I had raised up a couple of inches higher than the tank and rad.
Thanks,
Pat
Thanks,
Pat
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Cold. Stone cold.
And don't disconnect anything. Loosen the bleed screw on the top hose (that run across the fan shroud in front). Lift the tank up high, completely attached. Fill until you get a solid stream of water and no air bubbles coming out of the bleeder screw. Tighten the bleeder screw, with coolant still flowing through it and the tank raised. Once it's closed, then lower the tank. Fill the tank to the cap and put the cap back on. Run up to temperature. Don't freak out when it burps the excess coolant out of the hose attached to the tank that goes to the ground.
If your coolant level then ends up at or near the fill line on the tank with no boiling, you are fine.
And don't disconnect anything. Loosen the bleed screw on the top hose (that run across the fan shroud in front). Lift the tank up high, completely attached. Fill until you get a solid stream of water and no air bubbles coming out of the bleeder screw. Tighten the bleeder screw, with coolant still flowing through it and the tank raised. Once it's closed, then lower the tank. Fill the tank to the cap and put the cap back on. Run up to temperature. Don't freak out when it burps the excess coolant out of the hose attached to the tank that goes to the ground.
If your coolant level then ends up at or near the fill line on the tank with no boiling, you are fine.
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