Engine cooked
Rover 75 v6 2.5 conn tourer. Beautiful condition
I had recent problems last week after having a radiator replaced. Previous to this I have kept losing water after booting the car to overtake, engine temperature using 19-7 going from 94-111degC and really knowing where the leak was, but generally around the oil cooler area which appeared to be ok hence the radiator replacement. I travelled approx. 50 miles and had to fill up with water around 4 pints and the same on the way home then I had the problem of the engine temp going up to 130deg C. Into garage to confirm problem and yes I gasket gone and possibly the other, decided I would scrap the car as too expensive but garage states he may be able to recover the situation by adding a product to the oil which may/should seal the gasket/s and resolve the problem. I am a wee bit worried if this would work, even in the short term and would ask anyone on their thoughts please. |
Does sound like a Garage to posssibly avoid ..
putting stuff in to help ?:duh::duh: And Don't leap to the Rover...Headgasket diagnosis from them either .. Although the 130 degrees is not good there are many other places where water can be lost from on the V6 . Did you get that temp from the on board IPK ? Get a proper check and Diag from a More knowledgeable person before Scrapping your car ;). So many have been lost due to improper info/diagnosis from "Experts" and dodgy garages :eek: C |
The advice you'll get here is to fix the leak as first priority. Driving around without coolant is asking for trouble. Secondly, check that the radiator cooling fan works properly. Do the Demist Test and all that. When it's water-tight and properly bled (Follow the header tank lifting routine according the the Haynes manual. You do have a Haynes manual don't you?) When all this is correct, run the car and observe for problems. Avoid thrashing it until safe to do so. Come back here with any further queries. Avoid the garage suggestion. Nothing added to the oil will fix anything.
TC |
Hi James,
I agree with my colleagues' advice. Here's your situation as I see it:
Don't go quiet on us James will you. Keep posting and let us know what's happening. Simon |
Not another garage offering a drop of the bodgers delight! These "fixes" can have a short lifespan and are only temporary at best. They can do more harm than good. Only really any good to keep your old banger out the breakers for a bit longer, that's it.
Take advice offered by the more knowledgeable than me on here, they know what they're talking about. :D |
Add something to the oil ???? NEVER.
Was that the same garage that told you to replace the radiator ???-----:eek: A car in BEAUTIFUL condition must NOT be scrapped.---;) |
Engine cooked
Thanks for all your replies.
This is the 3rd time I have tried to send this so hope it works, other 2 times just lost message so have rewritten. The garage is not adding anything to the engine. The reason he suggested an additive was because I was going to scrap the car as it would be a too expensive repair re-gasketing. He is going to have another look for the water leak especially around the oil cooler as that was where it was before and it was found to be the radiator leaking and the oil cooler area dry. He also mentioned the 'EGR' ? He had carried out a 'DYE' test on the radiator and there is evidence of co2 in the coolant and that is why he said at least one head gasket has gone. Plus it has creamy oil on the dip stick now where as before it was just creamy on the oil filler cap. The belts, thermostat and water pump were replaced approx. 3/4 years ago. I did carry out a 'demist test' and the fan ran very fast and it has the gold resistor fitted, this was prior to the replacement radiator. When the radiator was replaced 19/7/2019 the car ran sweet, the temp 84-93degC and the air conditioning was cooler. But after a week the engine temperature fluctuated between 94-111deg C which I feel was due and always has been to overtaking and the pressure built up with consequent coolant loss. Never any water in the 'V'. Nor around the radiator. My problem is I am not aware of a Rover specialist in this area so I have to rely on my garage whom I may add has always been very helpful thorough and reasonable. So shall await word from garage mon/tues next. Many thanks |
Hi James; thanks for your detailed reply. I hope the following will reassure you.
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Simon |
As Simon said in the above post bleeding the system correctly is VITAL to its correct function.---:eek::eek::eek:
Any air left in and it WILL overheat.---:duh: |
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Why not? There's plenty of oil additives to that won't harm an engine. Most times they're just unnecessary. Adding stop leak to coolant is a bad idea though. Anyhow, the garage is funny. How are they going to stop a head gasket leak by adding something to the oil? |
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