Good afternoon, GTD!
Long time, no talk!
(damn Diesel has been jut running like a top...!)
Now I have a curious one....
I'll try to give all the relevant data I have, and see what you guys think.
Car: 85 Jetta TD, rebuilt engine last year, MLS HG & ARP studs, EGT pre-turbine (Aircraft spruce / VDO),
Radiator less than a year old, all new hoses at the same time..
-Started my car after work, went to a gas station, and let her idle for like 5 minutes while I went inside.
When I came back out, found a puddle of coolant under the car, coming out of the cap.
(Reservoir full to the top, and it was not overfilled before).
Drove it home, pissing coolant the whole way.
Temp gauge went over the LED within 10 minutes, and was pegged on top, with the red LED flashing within 20.
(At this time, I am getting really nervous, but I kept checking my EGT, thinking it cannot be overheating too bad with EGT ~ 450, so kept driving)
When I got home, I left her running, and got out to inspect, and found:
Coolant still coming out of the cap, upper and lower Rad hoses very warm, fan not running (temp still at the top of gauge) and the driver's side of the radiator is appreciably cooler than passengers side...
Diagnosis: T-stat stuck, hose collapsed (not likely as they are all new), clogged radiator (again, < 1 yr old), or combustion pressure getting into water system...
Repairs:
Replaced T-stat as I have never looked at it.
Re-filled with G12, and started it to check. Within 5 minutes at idle, temp is 75% and climbing... Shut her off. Not a bad T-stat.. (also tested the old one I pulled out, and it tested fine)
(After the fact, my VW tech friend asked me if I fingered the impeller on the water pump while I was there.... I did not)
Checked head stud torque: warmed the engine up, checked at 110 lb/ft, got maybe a 1/16 to 1/8 turn out of two studs, and then checked again at 115 lb/ft, no movement. Started the car up again to test this theory, same results (boiling in 10 mins or so)..
Then, one of my other VW friends says check the overflow into the bottle to see if the h2o pump is moving water.
No coolant pissing into the top of the bottle..
I felt the overflow hose (from the upper rad hose to coolant overflow bottle) and it has great pressure behind the nylon reducer, but no pressure after.
Cut the hose off, pulled out the nylon reducer, and found it completely blocked (very tiny hole: 0.5 mm?).
I removed it, re-attached the hose, and VIOLA! (good flow now pissing into the overflow bottle) BUT, Now the car will not really even warm up to temp!!
Feeling confident I was on the right track, I went for a drive, and after 20 mins of beating on it, was unable to get the temp past say 25% on the gauge (very cool), but rad hoses are reasonably hot to the touch, rad fan cycling, and both sides of the rad are now hot...
After a day of driving, I found the car to run almost too cool.
It never gets into the normal range (indicator covering the LED in the gauge), always stays cool.
And now, if I get her warm, and let her idle for 10 mins, it will begin to lose temp on the gauge, where it used to maintain temp in the "normal" range until you shut the car off...
SO, I thought I had it all figured out, I will make the hole in the nylon reducer a tad larger, to decrease the likelyhood of future obstruction, and get her back up to temp..
Drilled a 1/32" hole in the nylon reducer, installed it, and it has made almost no difference:
Temp gauge will hardly go past 25%, unless you are mean to her..
So, the question is:
Could that stupid little reducer make all the difference in the world for cooling,
could it being stopped actually keep water from moving across the radiator for cooling?
Could enlarging the hole just a little keep the car from getting up to temp at all?
(Or, am I still looking for an intermittent issue, and this was irrelevant...)
I had always heard, just take that thing out and you will run cooler,
but if it is as severe as this, that would not be good advice..
Thanks in advance!
-Brad