Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

G'day everyone

 

So for a while now my car has shown the same coolant temp which to me has always been low, so I finally decided to put in a new coolant temp sensor and WHOA it's now reading full hot, but the weird thing is my car, despite reading that high doesn't 'feel' hot.

  • No 'boiling' water
  • no loss of coolant
  • no milky stuff in oil
  • radiator can be touched without burning me
  • no smoke/fumes/burning smell

What on earth could be causing this? I might purchase a new radiator and thermostat but before I do, anyone got any advice on troubleshooting the issue?

Car is completely stock besides exhaust. Last weekend I changed plugs and did valve cover gaskets as well.

The before and after images of the temp with the new and old coolant temp sensor.

IMG_7713.JPG

IMG_7719.JPG

IMG_7722.JPG

From one extreme to the other, does it jump straight to that hot position or gradually work it's way up there as the car warms up from cold?

Most would recommend installing an aftermarket gauge that shows actual temps before trusting the factory gauge. Would be cheaper than chasing a heating issue that may not be present.

Well it rises to half very quickly and then after say 10 minutes of driving will hit the top, stagnates at half for a little while. I’m hoping it’s not because I used an after marker temp sensor (tridon brand)

50 minutes ago, neopowered34 said:

Well it rises to half very quickly and then after say 10 minutes of driving will hit the top, stagnates at half for a little while. I’m hoping it’s not because I used an after marker temp sensor (tridon brand)

I think you will find that is the case. The position the original sensor was showing looked about right.

Just now, admS15 said:

I think you will find that is the case. The position the original sensor was showing looked about right.

I might try giving the OEM sensor a really good clean and see if that changes anything, hopefully it can be revived 

3 minutes ago, GTSBoy said:

FFS! How about applying a little bit of science?

What do you mean? I’m not that clued on with your original post man, how does one measure resistance 

9 minutes ago, neopowered34 said:

What do you mean? I’m not that clued on with your original post man, how does one measure resistance 

Did you mean to Google that? Or ask random People in a forum? Because I would suggest googling it

4 minutes ago, Ben C34 said:

Did you mean to Google that? Or ask random People in a forum? Because I would suggest googling it

I came here to get some help, not be told to google my issue, i’ve tried that. Any other good people in the forums have some advice that are willing to help a fellow enthusiast 

2 minutes ago, robbo_rb180 said:

I don’t have a multimeter, maybe I should have made that clearer earlier.....but thanks 

1 minute ago, neopowered34 said:

I came here to get some help, not be told to google my issue, i’ve tried that. Any other good people in the forums have some advice that are willing to help a fellow enthusiast 

You've been told what you need to do to check the sensor is right. When you're relying on people to diagnose/repair it there is never a correct answer/solution with out doing some of the work. 

https://www.supercheapauto.com.au/p/sca-sca-multimeter---digital/387595.html

One of the best tools to own when trying to diagnose electrical issues. A quick google search and almost every basic problem is fixable with out asking questions on a forum. 

I miss the times before the internet was everywhere. 

 

  • Like 1
1 minute ago, robbo_rb180 said:

You've been told what you need to do to check the sensor is right. When you're relying on people to diagnose/repair it there is never a correct answer/solution with out doing some of the work. 

Understood, that’s why I came here but i need to look at getting the correct tools so I can diagnose. 

Just now, robbo_rb180 said:

https://www.supercheapauto.com.au/p/sca-sca-multimeter---digital/387595.html

One of the best tools to own when trying to diagnose electrical issues. A quick google search and almost every basic problem is fixable with out asking questions on a forum. 

I miss the times before the internet was everywhere. 

 

You gotta understand that not everyone has the same knowledge as you, so be patient....thanks for the help ?

9 minutes ago, neopowered34 said:

I don’t have a multimeter, maybe I should have made that clearer earlier.....but thanks 

how does one measure resistance

 

Your words. Google that.

a multimeter is like, 15 bucks? or less off ebay. Less than the sensor anyway. Have you checked the coolant? maybe the refill was fkd up and the car is actually running too hot.

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

    • Can't say I've had a bad experience with one on my car, then again it only gets washed once or twice a year... The wheels on the other hand, get a good spray often due to my shitty dusty pads.
    • @MBS206 thats pretty neat and tidy to me!  I'll get a photo of mine when I'm out there next. It might require multiple photos to understand the scale of the atrocities though... In total I have 4 sheds of varying sizes and layouts. Main shed is 14x8, second shed is 3x8, third shed is 11x2.5, fourth shed is around 6x4.  All are pretty much full.   The main goal of my cleaning tsunami is to make the main shed predominantly car and motorbikes only. Second shed is my metal fab room (2 x bench grinders, drill press, bench belt sander, metal band saw, scrap metal storage and some of my garden tools.  3rd shed is more bigger garden stuff, storage for engine crane, jack stands, concrete grinder, concrete mixer, air compressor lives there, and it now has two 2mx2m pallet racking shelves with itemised boxes holding building stuff, electrical stuff, plumbing stuff, etc, etc.  The 4th shed is Ryobi electric ride on mower, mini boom sprayer, ancient Kubota tractor, more garden stuff!  I have got a lot of shit....  Then there's the pool house (8mx4m) and the pool pump shed (4mx4m).  I built all of the sheds over the 11 years we've been here.  The main shed was a Ranbuild kit, the rest are all custom made to fit the areas available. Building the main shed taught me a LOT as I had no idea about building anything prior to that!  I've still got one more in me. It will be my man cave which I poured the extra concrete for way back when I poured the concrete for the main shed. The idea is the Skyline will be a centre piece of the main cave once (if...) it's finished.  I told my now 14 year old son yesterday that I will 100% drive him to his year 10 formal in 2 years. Still a long way off but at least I now have a date to work towards! 🤣
    • Modern oils are amazing. Add tyres to that as well.
    • Probably a smart choice to buy one vs build, purely for the motivation part as you said! Imagine the metal dust everywhere from grinding all the steel to build one. Ha ha ha!   Also, post a photo of your garage.   Mine is below, this is where I've been cleaning and have already half filled a caged 6*4 trailer. And this is after my cleaning expedition mentioned previously... The middle normally has a car in it, but I'm dumping things in the middle as I sort through them. And poor skyline was dusty and has had the lightest few drops of rain and now it looks atrocious and needs to be dragged back out and washed thoroughly! And yes to the right is technically another bay, you really can only see 2 bays out of 3 in this picture.  
    • It's more like on average the things I see a lot of things going wrong. Yes, usually the people who reach out are the ones who are having problems but on average it feels like mechanics and tuners here aren't really competent. I swing between thinking my standards are just way too high and wondering whether people really are just this dumb. I just had the strangest 10+ reply argument on a Facebook group over someone insisting that the factory R34 GTT boost control solenoid reduces boost pressure to 5 psi when it's on and raises boost pressure to 7 psi when it's off despite showing the exact plumbing in the factory service manual and the solenoid behavior detailed in the FSM.
×
×
  • Create New...