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Registered: 04/04/02
Posts: 2
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#177113 - 07/03/10 08:02 AM
Re: Over Heating
[Re: chef-chevy]
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Shade Tree Mechanic
Registered: 01/14/02
Posts: 92
Loc: Napa CA
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Chef, I don't have the answer for you, just a question.
Mine gets up to 180-190 driving around town. I haven't put many miles on it yet. Was wondering if I should get a 160 or 170 and put in it.
_________________________
1948 Chevy Fleetmaster Coupe, Purchased 6/20/2010 1947 Chevy Fleetmaster Coupe Leaving-Gone Sept 2011 1996 Monte Carlo 63,000 Miles, purchased new
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#177206 - 07/04/10 06:02 PM
Re: Over Heating
[Re: chef-chevy]
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Registered: 09/14/09
Posts: 2226
Loc: NC usa
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Chef, you say that the engine has 5K on it. I assume the block and head were properly cleaned by a dip process. Is this right? If so, then maybe the problem is elsewhere. I suggest making the following checks:
Radiator a. Drain the radiator. (catch the antifreeze mix, of course.) b. Take off the top and bottom hoses. c. Hold your hand over the bottom outlet and the top one as well. d. Have a helper fill the radiator to overflowing. e. Discontinue filling. f. Release hand from bottom outlet, observing height of flow and listening for a sucking sound in radiator's flues. Good, immediate evacuation of fluid (water) and almost no relatively long sucking sound will tell you the radiator is probably OK. A relatively slow evacuation of water and a relative long sucking sound indicates that some of the flues are either stopped up or partly stopped up. g. If not good evacuation and/or prolonged sucking sound, reverse flush the radiator by using you air chuck (wrap a towel around it) and blow the radiator out from the bottom through the top. Use a hose or something to route the water over board, if you care to. Otherwise it'll wet everything. Do the reverse flush process until you have a better flow. h. If no good results, either get the radiator rodded out, a new radiator or new core.
Head gasket a. Take the thermostat out. b. Replace the thermostat housing (leave hose off). c. Fill the radiator until the water is level with the top of the thermostat housing opening. d. loosen the fan belt and trip it so that the water pump won't turn. e. Have someone crank the engine over. Water should just sit there. f. Look for compression bubbles coming out the thermostat outlet. g. If none at "f" above, then start the engine for a short to see if any form then. Again, water should just sit there as if minding its own business. h. If none, then the head gasket is OK.
Radiator fins a. Check to see if the radiator fins are stopped up with bugs (or them there 7 or 14 year zakadas (sp) or what ever year or proper name for those critters happens to be. (I drove my 41 through MS/LA one summer back in the early seventies. I was a cruising along, heading west on I-20 at about 55MPH when all of a sudden there was this whap! whap, whap. I didn't know what was a-going on. Soon discovered in the headlights these alien UFOs a-coming at me and splattering themselves against the car and my windshield. Just turrble! They wuz bug guts everywhere. You bayou folk know what I mean.) b. If stopped up, take the radiator out. c. Use an air blower chuck on your compressor, water spray or whatever and blow the bugs out. Back to front will work best (after all that's the opposite way they wuz going when they got stuck in there in the first place.
Best, Charlie
BTW: I think Chevgene's advice that the engine will heat up if sitting at slow idle for any extended period. Unless, it is worn slap out of course.
BTW2: If the block was cleaned and none of the above defects are discovered, then go into the house, get your Colt 45 and shoot the thing. (Grin, of course)
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#177751 - 07/13/10 05:23 AM
Re: Over Heating
[Re: Uncle Ed]
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Oil Can Mechanic
Registered: 04/25/08
Posts: 578
Loc: WI
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I have been driving my dads '40 Special Deluxe every weekend for the past month. I've noticed that the car will start to run warm when driving slow in town, not bad but closer to 190 - 200. If I get in a line of cars going into a show or real heavy rush hour traffic it will get close to the red (210). Once on the road it starts to cool down from about 35 up to 55. I have been using the throttle to bring the idle up when it gets close to being really hot and that seems to help maintain it. Its never boiled over / puked coolant out. It doesn't seem to matter if the weather is 90 or 70, the car still acts the same. I've just learned to not get over excited and now feel comfortable how the car is going to act. Gene has noted exactly what I'm finding with our car and it seems to be normal to run a tad bit warm without air going through the radiator. Don
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#180777 - 08/15/10 08:35 PM
Re: Over Heating
[Re: Chev Nut]
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Registered: 12/14/01
Posts: 11880
Loc: Central Texas
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Are you talking about the exhaust pipe flange to intake manifold bras nuts? I usually try to use a "real stamped metal flange" rather than the flat piece of steel plasma cut one with the slotted bolt holes. But if you have only the repop flat piece for a flange double nut the brass with two steel nuts and jam lock them together.
_________________________
Lone Star Region Chat Group Chapter member http://www.lsrclub.orgLife's a long winding trail, ride a good horse!
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#180884 - 08/16/10 07:19 PM
Re: Over Heating
[Re: chef-chevy]
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Registered: 12/14/01
Posts: 11880
Loc: Central Texas
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That is the one I was talking about (double nut the flange to the intake)
NOT: The 3 alignment rings that go between the manifold and the cylinder head.
_________________________
Lone Star Region Chat Group Chapter member http://www.lsrclub.orgLife's a long winding trail, ride a good horse!
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