I'm trying to track down an issue where I have oil in the coolant but no coolant in the oil. It's possible that the oil cooler could be bad but wouldn't some coolant be getting into the oil? I'm suspecting the compressor but before I tear that apart I'm wondering if that's physically possible?
Oil in coolant but no coolant in oil
Discussion in 'International Forum' started by joedown, Jun 6, 2012.
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Check oil cooler first oil pressure is higher then cooling pressure
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What engine?
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DT466 Is that always? Wouldn't the coolant pressure be higher after you turn the truck off?
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Start with oil cooler. Think about it. Oil pressure is from 20 to 40 pounds, radiator pressure cap is only a few pounds.Oil will get into water by the pressure difference.
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It's basically just 4 orings that separate the oil and coolant on 466 coolers. They go hard and break down after years of service. Chances are if you kept running it in short time yes, you will also have coolant in the oil too. Easy job to reseal, I would be doing that before an air compressor.
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So you're thinking I just need to replace the seals and not the whole cooler unit? I've replaced the seals before on a T444E is it about as easy on a 466? Also how good do I have to flush out the oil residue in the cooling system once the leak is fixed? I plan to flush it out and convert from the green stuff to the ELC.
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444 and 466 are same basic design, 466 is bigger. As far as the seals only or cooler and seals, you would need to test it. If you want to cover all your bases, you would replace the cooler. For the most part, they are a good cooler and chances are you only need seals. I'm not sure on a cooler price so I don't know how expensive they are to replace.
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Do you have an oil cooler on your transmission? If so, I would check that too.
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