whiteoaks7
Well-Known Member
Volvo 2003T, indirect cooling.
Symptoms: First noticed when checking the water level the day after a five hour hard slog on engine. The header tank level had increased from min to overflowing.
Tests: Next day measured engine temperatures at the thermostat housing which indicated a reasonable time to reach temperature and then remained static at 70C ish for the three hours of that voyage. Removing the pressure cap while running indicated that there was no pressure being maintained. There were no leaks (just a check for thoroughness) and there didn’t seem to be oil in the coolant nor coolant in the oil. Drying out a sample of coolant to check for salt was inclonclusive; the coolant was pretty dirty despite being fresh 25hrs ago.
Diagnoses: (1) Pinhole in the heat exchanger. This would allow coolant out or seawater in depending on the local pressure difference. Assuming the coolant was initially under pressure it would flow out until the pressure difference was zero and then stop. This wouldn’t result in an increase of volume in the header. The other way – seawater into the coolant – would result in an increase of volume and but the coolant would have to be at a lower pressure than the seawater in the exchanger. Is that likely? There would also have to be enough seawater pressure to overcome the coolant pressure which should be induced by the pressure cap.
(2) Pinhole in the calorifier: This would allow domestic water into the coolant if the pump was set at a higher value than the pressure cap. If this were the case then there would be nothing to stop the entire contents of the domestic water tank emptying through the pressure cap. The domestic pump does run at odd moments but I’ve always assumed this was just a pressure ‘weep’. Besides the engine bilge would fill up with the overflow. [Update: overnight there was no increase in header tank volume] If coolant was pushed into the domestic hot water I hope we would notice before we were poisoned – and again this would not account for the increase in volume.
(3) Faulty cap: The symptom of no pressure can be explained by a faulty cap but how could this result in an increase in coolant level. We need to know if this is a repeating phenomenon, in which case it has to be an inward leak, or a one off that could be caused by something like the cap failing.
David Berry
Symptoms: First noticed when checking the water level the day after a five hour hard slog on engine. The header tank level had increased from min to overflowing.
Tests: Next day measured engine temperatures at the thermostat housing which indicated a reasonable time to reach temperature and then remained static at 70C ish for the three hours of that voyage. Removing the pressure cap while running indicated that there was no pressure being maintained. There were no leaks (just a check for thoroughness) and there didn’t seem to be oil in the coolant nor coolant in the oil. Drying out a sample of coolant to check for salt was inclonclusive; the coolant was pretty dirty despite being fresh 25hrs ago.
Diagnoses: (1) Pinhole in the heat exchanger. This would allow coolant out or seawater in depending on the local pressure difference. Assuming the coolant was initially under pressure it would flow out until the pressure difference was zero and then stop. This wouldn’t result in an increase of volume in the header. The other way – seawater into the coolant – would result in an increase of volume and but the coolant would have to be at a lower pressure than the seawater in the exchanger. Is that likely? There would also have to be enough seawater pressure to overcome the coolant pressure which should be induced by the pressure cap.
(2) Pinhole in the calorifier: This would allow domestic water into the coolant if the pump was set at a higher value than the pressure cap. If this were the case then there would be nothing to stop the entire contents of the domestic water tank emptying through the pressure cap. The domestic pump does run at odd moments but I’ve always assumed this was just a pressure ‘weep’. Besides the engine bilge would fill up with the overflow. [Update: overnight there was no increase in header tank volume] If coolant was pushed into the domestic hot water I hope we would notice before we were poisoned – and again this would not account for the increase in volume.
(3) Faulty cap: The symptom of no pressure can be explained by a faulty cap but how could this result in an increase in coolant level. We need to know if this is a repeating phenomenon, in which case it has to be an inward leak, or a one off that could be caused by something like the cap failing.
David Berry