Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Cars been doing this for a while now but as aim about to sell it i thought i better sort it out for the new owner.

It used to be that my car warmed up then the temp needle sat in the middle of the gauge. Now it seems after 20-30 odd min of driving the temp needle will go almost to the red part at the top (only a few mm off) then it will quickly fall back to about 3/4 then slowly climb and repeat the cycle. Also now when I get home and turn the car off i can hear the water bubbling in the system, this bubbling is quite obvious and lasts for up to a min or two sometimes.

I’ve had the radiator fully flushed by ice performance so i don’t believe there are any blockages in it. I've also had the water pump replaced about 14K km's ago so its still prety new.

So i think it can only be either the thermostat is dieing and as such is opening much later than it should or the water temp sensor is busted.

I’m still learning cars so please point out if I’m wrong.

Any ideas which one it is and where i could get replacement parts. i.e. repco

Thanks for any help

Edited by linxus40
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/129250-my-car-is-almost-overheating/
Share on other sites

that up and down sort of action is usually caused by air passing through the engine

air trapped in the system is a higher temp than the water

bleed your radiator properly, and have a C0 2 test done on your radiator at a mechanics to check for a already blown gasket that could be letting air into the cooling system

if it was air in the system the temp gauge would drop to cold, sensor cant read the temp from air. If the thermostat is ok, check the sensor that turns your fans one. Does it do it more in trafic of on the open road or is there no difference. If it does it in traficc and open road id be looking at thermostat, if it only does it in trafic then maybe a problem with fans.

if it was air in the system the temp gauge would drop to cold, sensor cant read the temp from air.

that would be true if all he had was air in his cooling system. even if it was true, he would be reading the air temp which would still be high.

if he has air in his cooling system there would be less amounts of water in his radiator, the less water there is, the hotter it will get.

that would be true if all he had was air in his cooling system. even if it was true, he would be reading the air temp which would still be high.

if he has air in his cooling system there would be less amounts of water in his radiator, the less water there is, the hotter it will get.

Air will be hot, granted, BUT, the coolant temp senser cant read from the air, its not dense enough and temp will read low.

Air will be hot, granted, BUT, the coolant temp senser cant read from the air, its not dense enough and temp will read low.

haha

well you tell me why both my mechanical autometer guage and the stock temp guage red near high when i blew 4 litres of water out the busted turbo water feed ???

Here is the procedure for adding new coolant.... just follow the bit relevant to bleeding:

Edit: also set the climate control to max heat so water flows through the heater core.

--

Adding the new coolant:

Adding the new coolant is quite a laborious and repetitive task, but extremely important given that air pockets in the coolant system is likely to cause sharp spikes in engine temperature.

If your coolant is pre-mixed you can go ahead. If, like me, your coolant needs to be mixed with water, obviously work out the required proportions and combine (if you don't have a big enough container, do about 2L at a time. Small variations in the mixture won't matter, but try to be accurate).

Below is the procedure described in the R33 workshop manual (its a little clearer than the R32 workshop manual) with my comments/correction/suggestions in []'s:

1. Undo and remove the air release valve. [stupidly I didn't take a picture of this. The release valve is located on the left of the engine (looking from the front of the car), on the front side of intake manifold collector. You will see a little sticker underneath it that says "Never open when hot".]

2. Top up the radiator with coolant at [a] filling speed of less than 2L / min [keep checking under the car -- both near the radiator and near the block drain plug -- to ensure that the coolant isn't spilling out somewhere]. Close the plug if coolant start spouting out from the air release plug while filling up the radiator [i suggest you place a rag underneath the plug, and allow as many air bubble out as possible. Only close the plug when there is a steady stream of coolant flowing out]. Top up coolant to the top.

* Replace air release plug copper washer with a new one. [i didn't bother, but I guess you should :dry:]

3. Close the radiator cap and start the engine. Keep idling until the thermostat injection vale opens.

4. Check that the engine coolant temperature gauge needle is pointing over mid way [this will take 5-10 minutes of idling]. Touch the radiator lower hose and make sure warm water is flowing. [i think they got that the wrong way round: warm water should be flowing through the top radiator pipe]

5. After checking the thermostat injection valve, race the engine 2 to 3 times with 10 [second intervals at 2500RPM between each race].

CAUTION: Do not raise the engine coolant temperature too high.

6. Stop the engine.

7. After cooling down the engine [this will take 30-60mins each time :)], open the radiator cap and check the level of coolant. If the coolant level has decreased repeat the steps from 2. [i had to redo this process about four times over about 90 minutes]

8. Once the coolant level has stabilised, top up the coolant to the MAX line [printed on the inside of the radiator filler hole].

9. Refill the coolant to the filler tube. [Replace] the radiator cap and stop the engine [the engine shouldn't be on anyway, so I have NFI what they mean]

10. After cooling down the engine, refill the reservoir tank with coolant to the MAX line.

11. Restart the engine and increase the engine speed to 3000 rpm from the idling position. At this time make sure there is no heater core water flowing sound from the instrument panel area [i think they are referring to the center console area]. If there is a water flowing sound, repeat steps 2 to 10 until the coolant level stabilises.

As I noted, I had to 'top up --> turn on car --> race engine --> cool down car' about four times before the levels stabilised. Be careful when opening the radiator cap after cooling the car: the coolant can be surprisingly hot.

that up and down sort of action is usually caused by air passing through the engine

air trapped in the system is a higher temp than the water

Second that.

yeah, but dude that is if there is pretty much zero water in there. his problem is most likely just pockets of air. system needs a good bleed.

Also second that. :P

If its an R32 don't forget that bleed nipple located on the top hose running to/from the heater core. Dropping ALL coolant often causes an airlock in the heater that runs around the system causing the symptoms you are describing. The bleed nipple on the plenum is not sufficient to bleed air from this location. If its a GTR.. Not 100% sure on their setup if they do indeed also run the bleed nipple (t piece) on the top heater core hose. On the GTST Its located directly behind the inlet cam rocker cover, hidden away, not easy to see.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • So we have most the interior back in, and for the first time with one OEM speaker hooked up. The 31 is running, driving and now tunes!!! Hahaha yet another step for the sub that sat 10m under for two weeks!!! unbelievable really 👌 lots of love work and not giving up on her. Seen so many youngsters part way less, and in way better condition. I’m stubborn, thinking another problem is just a hurdle to overcome, One at a time. IMG_9277.mov
    • That is correct. I'm using a modified ABS ring and a ZF speed sensor on my rear diff for speed input. I'm running a Haltech ecu. 
    • Been busy with the newborn. We originally thought we were going to go for a third, but we're good with two lol. He's starting to actually sleep now so I've had some energy to work on the car. It's been parked away in the garage since late November due to winter.  I went ahead and redid all my head oil drains. I originally had my front and rear head drain going into the same pipe but have since split them up. I also added an Ethanol content sensor to get ready to run E85 this summer. Tossed it on my return line. Sensor sits nicely under my intake manifold.    I also have a lot of parts that came in for my rear end. I'll be swapping over to a 3.3 final drive and doing the GK teck anti squat mod. While the rear subframe is off, I'll also change every bushing. We're planning on buying another house soon with the condition that I get at a minimum a 2 door garage, so I'll wait to have more room for this. Now onto the strange things that recently happened... After changing the lower rad hose (It had been sitting in my cabinet for well over a year and was the last hose I had to replace), I let the car idle in the garage to bleed my coolant. After running for a few minutes, it started missing. Got much worst within a minute or two and then stalled and would not restart. My crank sensor decided to crap itself. No damage, no explanation, just died. I went ahead and replaced it with another ZF sensor but the heavier duty stainless model with a shield. Tossed that in and started right up. Has anyone else seen this? I hate when things fail without cause. Luckily this was a blessing in disguise... This lead me to recheck my timing. It seems I may have had a beer or two the last time I had set my TDC angle as I was off exactly 5 degrees... I miscounted a line haha. I was running 5 degrees less then commanded. It's a little embarrassing but helps explain why my dyno operator seemed to think I should be making more then 478rwkws.        
    • Sharing results from recent Liberty Walk R35 GTR, since they are still considered as somesort of a V36 Skyline. We do them turbos too. This are high flowed SS-1 models with ball bearing conversion done.  Car have managed to pull 485awkws @ 20Psi so far pushing limitations of factory built engine. The build list for R35 GTR enthusiasts as follow : HyperGear high flowed stock turbos in SS1 (G25-660 specs) Custom titanium intake pipes. Vspec performance titanium front pipes. Vspec performance 4" titanium exhaust. Upgrade fuel pumps. 1200cc injectors. Ignition coilpacks Hks intake plenum. Hks intercooler piping. Greddy intercooler. Greddy bovs. Top-secret coolant reservoir. Emtron ecu. Straight E85. Built gear box.  
    • Nah no bearings, just slip fit.  Would be a reasonably challenging but not impossible job to modify it to run bearings but I'm hoping that's not necessary as I may have well built one myself if I end up spending hours modifying it!
×
×
  • Create New...