Bee Elzebub
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2011
- Messages
- 91
Ooopsie! Looks like I've got a 'cooker' on my hands, now, with my 2.7Tdi Maverick...
Took a 286-mile-long drive yesterday, mostly 70mph motorway cruising - the temperature gauge (which normally doesn't go higher than about 20% of its range) started to climb toward half-way; I wasn't worried, just surprised - but when I parked-up at Brooklands Museum & walked around the jeep's front, there was rusty brown water dripping down underneath...
I popped the bonnet - the expansion tank (that's normally always totally empty) was full to its cap with frothy rusty-coloured water, some of it dribbling out of the top vent, all over the electric plugs right behind its mount. Oh, sh*t, I thought - but I got on with my visit, as it'd cost me a lot of aggro to arrange...
Once it had cooled, I topped-up the radiator via its cap, as normal, and toddled off home. The gauge stayed low again until I reached Dartford tunnel, when it started to climb as I sat in the (thankfully short) queue - again, it didn't go over the half-way mark, so I twitched my eyebrows in puzzlement and drove on - but when I got up the A12 around Witham, there was another standing queue from a minor accident...and that's when the temperature really started to climb up. Obviously, it had pushed out enough coolant by then, to start going that high. The power of prayer shifted the queue and off I went; about four miles on, the gauge was back down to about 30-40%, so I just kept going until I got home...and again, there was frothy coffee dripping out of the tank breather.
My guess - is this a clear sign of a blown head-gasket? Or might it be a sign of another cooling problem - say, the viscous coupling on the fan (if this engine has such a coupling)? :nenau
If so, is the swap a difficult one, with the intercooling kit over the engine? Any special tools/techniques required?
Any practical advice most welcome!!:bow
Took a 286-mile-long drive yesterday, mostly 70mph motorway cruising - the temperature gauge (which normally doesn't go higher than about 20% of its range) started to climb toward half-way; I wasn't worried, just surprised - but when I parked-up at Brooklands Museum & walked around the jeep's front, there was rusty brown water dripping down underneath...
I popped the bonnet - the expansion tank (that's normally always totally empty) was full to its cap with frothy rusty-coloured water, some of it dribbling out of the top vent, all over the electric plugs right behind its mount. Oh, sh*t, I thought - but I got on with my visit, as it'd cost me a lot of aggro to arrange...
Once it had cooled, I topped-up the radiator via its cap, as normal, and toddled off home. The gauge stayed low again until I reached Dartford tunnel, when it started to climb as I sat in the (thankfully short) queue - again, it didn't go over the half-way mark, so I twitched my eyebrows in puzzlement and drove on - but when I got up the A12 around Witham, there was another standing queue from a minor accident...and that's when the temperature really started to climb up. Obviously, it had pushed out enough coolant by then, to start going that high. The power of prayer shifted the queue and off I went; about four miles on, the gauge was back down to about 30-40%, so I just kept going until I got home...and again, there was frothy coffee dripping out of the tank breather.
My guess - is this a clear sign of a blown head-gasket? Or might it be a sign of another cooling problem - say, the viscous coupling on the fan (if this engine has such a coupling)? :nenau
If so, is the swap a difficult one, with the intercooling kit over the engine? Any special tools/techniques required?
Any practical advice most welcome!!:bow