mpboxer
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I was out this past weekend in the dirt pushing the truck, but I didn’t think that hard. Ambient temperature was mid 70s, in 4hi through some single track desert trail. Coolant temps hovered between 200F and 220F. Don’t remember trans and oil temps but nothing concerning. When we got to our destination I smelled coolant and realized it was leaking from the bottom of the reservoir near the fitting. The coolant was also bubbling in the reservoir (). No check engine lights or warnings.
Returning back to camp I babied it and kept engine about 190F. No more coolant loss. I drove it home the next morning 300 miles keeping it under 200F on the highway and side streets with no coolant loss or bubbling.
I bought a new elbow fitting (actually entire hose assembly because Jeep doesn’t just sell the fitting) and new reservoir w/cap (these are on back order and very hard to get). I disassembled the coolant bottle from the fitting to find the bottle was fine and the fitting wasn’t cracked.
Here’s the interesting part. There’s a weep hole near the threaded portion of the bottle where cap screws in and goes down to the bottom of the bottle. This would make it appear as if the fitting was cracked, when in reality, if coolant was making it past the cap it would leak from under the bottle. Needless to say, I just installed a new cap and reinstalled the old bottle on the old elbow fitting because I didn’t want to introduce more variables and other parts looked fine. Not sure if this logic makes sense but if the cap is not holding the correct pressure (21psi) I would get the boiling over in the reservoir sooner. I haven’t had a chance to run it up to 220F and test my theory or if the cap fixed it yet, but I am curious what others think?
Also, could this little weep hole be a reason for coolant loss over a long period of time, evaporation? Also, could this be why some think the fitting is cracked underneath the bottle when actually it isn’t?
Thanks,
Mike
Returning back to camp I babied it and kept engine about 190F. No more coolant loss. I drove it home the next morning 300 miles keeping it under 200F on the highway and side streets with no coolant loss or bubbling.
I bought a new elbow fitting (actually entire hose assembly because Jeep doesn’t just sell the fitting) and new reservoir w/cap (these are on back order and very hard to get). I disassembled the coolant bottle from the fitting to find the bottle was fine and the fitting wasn’t cracked.
Here’s the interesting part. There’s a weep hole near the threaded portion of the bottle where cap screws in and goes down to the bottom of the bottle. This would make it appear as if the fitting was cracked, when in reality, if coolant was making it past the cap it would leak from under the bottle. Needless to say, I just installed a new cap and reinstalled the old bottle on the old elbow fitting because I didn’t want to introduce more variables and other parts looked fine. Not sure if this logic makes sense but if the cap is not holding the correct pressure (21psi) I would get the boiling over in the reservoir sooner. I haven’t had a chance to run it up to 220F and test my theory or if the cap fixed it yet, but I am curious what others think?
Also, could this little weep hole be a reason for coolant loss over a long period of time, evaporation? Also, could this be why some think the fitting is cracked underneath the bottle when actually it isn’t?
Thanks,
Mike
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