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#1
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I have a 97 3.1 Lumina that had a front end collision back in 01, and since then I haven't driven it. I recently crashed my Jimmy
so I needed a vehicle, and embarked on a repair mission on the Lumina.So, a long story short I replaced the smashed leaky radiator, and when refilling after repair I could could only fit 4 qts water into it, and heats up to around 180-200 (above normal temp), no heat comes out, and the water boils into the resoivor tank. Then, it sprung a leak from a small rubber hose underneath the air intake. That hose comes off of a metal hose that runs from the top of the water pump, across the block along the exhaust manifold heat shield, then underneath the throttle body (where it has 2 rubber hoses coming off, 1 of those leaking, going into the block) Is the cooling system clogged? What is the purpose of that hose, what is it? What are other possible diagnosis for this? Also, I did NOT replace the A/C condenser since the radiator support was smashed so bad it didnt fit. Suggestions anyone? Please help. Thanks... |
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#2
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Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
It sounds like a few things; (1) you may have a bad thermostat, if its stuck in the closed position, it would cause your car to overheat; (2) not getting heat inside the car and the temp gauge is reading higher than normal suggests that an air pocket is trapped in your cooling system, and it needs to be bled. The small rubber hose coming off of the metal pipe is your throttle body coolant bypass hose. I think the purpose of that is to send a little heat to the throttle to prevent icing during cold weather (kind of like the old caburetor preheat hose). Not replacing the A/C condensor would not affect your cooling system. Hopefully, the bubbling in your reservoir is because of a stuck thermostat and not because of a blown head gasket.
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#3
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Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
The 3.1 engine requires a specific coolant bleed proceedure any time the cooling system is opened. Air gets trapped in the upper end of these engines, and that's what the two little brass valves (one on the t-stat housing, one on the transfer tube end near the water pump) are for. Failure to bleed the system will cause the symptoms you describe, and can lead to overheating and head gasket failure, so don't dirve the car until you bleed the system.
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#4
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Thanks for the help so far...
When I replaced the rad I bought and tried to install a new thermostat as well, but I could not get a good angle on the bottom of the 2 screws to take the housing off (throttle body/exhaust heatshield in the way), and I didnt want to try to take the throttle body off, so i couldn't install it. The haynes manual picture makes it look easy (like the throttle body isnt jammed right above it). Any suggestions on how to easily replace the thermostat? Maybe it's just me but it's not nearly as easy as I've seen in other cars. Also, the metal pipe I described that goes off the water pump, across the engine, and into the firewall (that has 2 rubber pipes going off it under the throttle body, one of them that sprung a leak) I think that that's the line to the heater core? Anyone know about that? Thanks for your help and time..... |
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#5
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I have something similar.
My engine will run about 45 minutes before it overheats due to lack of coolant. The coolant dissappears, then it starts to overheat, the vapor bubbles into the plastic overflow tank. 1. I blew up the radiator water hose because the excess of pressure. 2. It blew the "low coolant" sensor out of the radiator. 3. It blew the radiator side reservoir because of the excessive pressure. The overheating tents to find a path of least resistance to vent, blowiing the weakest links in the cooling system. It appears this is caused by a leak in the intake manifold that drains the coolant. I will have this gaskets replaced tomorrow. Will post results. ================================================== === Quote:
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#6
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Re: Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
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Overheating due to lack of coolant shouldn't cause pressure that high. |
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#7
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Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
Quote:
__________________
1963 Triumph TR3 12K 1995 Buick Century Special 178K 1999 Chevy Lumina LTZ 160K 2001 Suburu Forester 53K 2002 Oldsmobile Aurora 3.5 45K 2004 BMW Z8 3K 2005 Dodge Charger .5K 2006 Jaguar XJ12 1K
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#8
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Quote:
Hello Everybody: Just to give closure to the case. I forgot to mention that I had thrown away the thermostat some time back. The oil was clean at the disptick and the oil cap. No signs of water or rust. Had the car at the mechanic while the Hurricane was coming through Florida. When I got the car back I didn't had the chance to see the Intake gaskets. I only saw one of the head gaskets. Had signs of water leakage. Since then I have drove the car for several days and the needle fluctuates between 1/4 and 3/8ths of the gauge. Good luck to everyone else Allan |
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#9
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FYI to all concerned:
At least the 3100 engines, if not the 3400, have unreliable intake gaskets which erode from any type of coolant you use, not just long-life. This is a known issue with 3100 engines; confirmed by my mechanic and my brother in law's mechanic. There are replacement intake gaskets made of a better-quality, reliable material but be forewarned this takes ~6 hours of labor to replace with a mechanic. |
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#10
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Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
I still say from what Suke described, that the bleed proceedure wasn't done properly, causing steam to build up in the upper intake and now more problems have cropped up. The intake gaskets are suspect, but Suke gave no indication that there was a problem prior to the accident that led to the new radiator and t-stat, and refilling the cooling system, just my
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#11
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Re: Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
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#12
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Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
no offense taken, you make a good point bhame, and it's always good to present other known problems. Since it seems that the car has been run hot, then the intake gaskets SHOULD be checked at this point for sure. What I was getting at is that if the bleed proceedure isn't followed properly this time, no matter what they do, they'll be doing it again. I have always supported any and all suggestions on this forum as long as they aren't personal attacks, so don't worry if you thought you may have stepped on my toes, we're good. Every bit of info a person gets is helpful.
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#13
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Re: Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
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#14
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Re: 97 3.1 Cooling system Issue........
The actual step by step proceedure is in most good repair manuals. I've posted this before, let me find it and I will post a link, as it's a lenghty proceedure.
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#15
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Quote:
OK, I've found the following links: http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...=bleed+coolant ...not super-descriptive but informative... http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...=bleed+coolant ...a little more description... BTW, should the screws be replaced while the engine is running, or shut engine down first? http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...=bleed+coolant ...a different-sounding (to me at least) method of bleeding... http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...=bleed+coolant ...a third recommendation, from my ignorant perspective... I found these under a search in the Lumina thread, "coolant bleed". I believe you that you've posted it - it's just that I'm unable to find it.
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