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Draining Coolant
02-18-2007, 09:27
Post: #1
Draining Coolant
When draining the coolant by opening the radiator bottom tank drain
valve, I expected to see the coolant flow become less because the
radiator cap was not removed. The coolant flow continued at the same
flow until all the coolant was drained. Any thoughts on this? Perhaps a
bad radiator cap letting in air?

Curt Sprenger
1987 PT38 8V92 "MacAttack Racing"
Anaheim Hills, Calif.
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02-18-2007, 10:09
Post: #2
Draining Coolant
You may have only drained part of the system Curt? Be sure the front
heater lines & the aftercooler are flushed out too, I hook up a hose to
mine, flush it & then hook up the air compressor & blow it all out with
air before refilling. I would go ahead & replace the rad cap as a matter
of prevention. I pull the covers off the thermostats too & check (or
replace) them.


Terry Neal
Bozeman, MT
82PT40
74FC34



Curt Sprenger wrote:

> When draining the coolant by opening the radiator bottom tank drain
> valve, I expected to see the coolant flow become less because the
> radiator cap was not removed. The coolant flow continued at the same
> flow until all the coolant was drained. Any thoughts on this? Perhaps a
> bad radiator cap letting in air?
>
> Curt Sprenger
> 1987 PT38 8V92 "MacAttack Racing"
> Anaheim Hills, Calif.
>
>
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02-18-2007, 10:32
Post: #3
Draining Coolant
Curt- how are your hoses?
Ernie Ekberg
83PT40
Livingston,Montana
----- Original Message -----
From: Terry Neal
To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 3:09 PM
Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Draining Coolant


You may have only drained part of the system Curt? Be sure the front
heater lines & the aftercooler are flushed out too, I hook up a hose to
mine, flush it & then hook up the air compressor & blow it all out with
air before refilling. I would go ahead & replace the rad cap as a matter
of prevention. I pull the covers off the thermostats too & check (or
replace) them.

Terry Neal
Bozeman, MT
82PT40
74FC34

Curt Sprenger wrote:

> When draining the coolant by opening the radiator bottom tank drain
> valve, I expected to see the coolant flow become less because the
> radiator cap was not removed. The coolant flow continued at the same
> flow until all the coolant was drained. Any thoughts on this? Perhaps a
> bad radiator cap letting in air?
>
> Curt Sprenger
> 1987 PT38 8V92 "MacAttack Racing"
> Anaheim Hills, Calif.
>
>





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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02-18-2007, 11:04
Post: #4
Draining Coolant
I'm replacing all of the hoses, coolant, fuel, oil.

Curt Sprenger
1987 PT38 8V92 "MacAttack Racing"
Anaheim Hills, Calif.



ernieekberg@... wrote:

> Curt- how are your hoses?
> Ernie Ekberg
> 83PT40
> Livingston,Montana
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Terry Neal
> To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com
>
> Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 3:09 PM
> Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Draining Coolant
>
> You may have only drained part of the system Curt? Be sure the front
> heater lines & the aftercooler are flushed out too, I hook up a hose to
> mine, flush it & then hook up the air compressor & blow it all out with
> air before refilling. I would go ahead & replace the rad cap as a matter
> of prevention. I pull the covers off the thermostats too & check (or
> replace) them.
>
> Terry Neal
> Bozeman, MT
> 82PT40
> 74FC34
>
> Curt Sprenger wrote:
>
> > When draining the coolant by opening the radiator bottom tank drain
> > valve, I expected to see the coolant flow become less because the
> > radiator cap was not removed. The coolant flow continued at the same
> > flow until all the coolant was drained. Any thoughts on this? Perhaps a
> > bad radiator cap letting in air?
> >
> > Curt Sprenger
> > 1987 PT38 8V92 "MacAttack Racing"
> > Anaheim Hills, Calif.
> >
> >
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
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