I have a 2006 Freightliner Columbia with a Mercedes engine.
When I got my truck last winter, it didn't have any antifreeze, so I drained all the water out and filled it with antifreeze. Now it seems to be pumping water out the overflow, perhaps a gallon or so every 600 miles. Might bleeding the radiator to remove any air in it help with the problem? If so, how do I do that?
Coolant Leaking from the Radiator Overflow
Discussion in 'Freightliner Forum' started by xtx89, Jul 31, 2012.
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um....... did you dilute the anti freeze or was it premixed? pushing that much water out could mean a headgasket failure.
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Yes, we diluted it. I'm here on behalf of my dad so apologies if my terminology is poor.
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Did you burp system of air when refilled? There is a small valve on hard coolant line that assists with burning. Open it as you refill coolant. You can have air pockets. I'd try that before going head gasket route. Why was there only water in system? Ongoing problem?
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Mine was doing that and it turned out to be a bad radiator cap on the reservoir tank.
The cap wasn't sealing so the system couldn't pressurize properly.PROSTREET80 Thanks this. -
ditto on the radiator cap.
they don't hold pressure. -
dang totaly slipped my mind on that one. thats alot cheaper than a headgasket!PROSTREET80 Thanks this.
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Now now snowwy, If they don't hold presure than the next time your engine temp is about 200 or so you twist that baby off and tell me what happens after the fact. Just be careful now and do it at your own risk
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Hopefully it is just the cap. But super hauler is probably right if its not that then its a good possibility it is the headgasket leaking and getting to much presure in the coolant system. Good luck I hope it turns out to be the cap.
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