bleed the coolant as an air lock is possibly causing your overheating. Park on level, when cold remove cap, start leave to idle when hot it should bubble over, top up with very warm water, wait it may
air???....usually a bleed screw near the thermostat housing...get allllll the air out...simetimes the heater core is at the highest oart if the system..therefore if there is air in system..thats where
...bleed air from bleeding screw. you will see bubbles if there are any after few minutes of idling.if nothing helps you will understand that you need a new cabin heater or you need to try to clean ...
...and flushed the radiator. What do you think the problem may be? Maybe the heater core is plugged or perhaps you have an air pocket in the cooling system. Try and bleed the cooling system once
bleed the water it automatically takes out the air when it runs and the thermostat valve opens check the level again after a run of 5 miles or when the temp is in the middle remember not to check when
...air pocket which is possible if the proper fill and bleed procedure wasn't followed with the thermostat replacement.so if replacing thermostat does not help try this hold the garden hose tightly to ...
...air bleed valve before any coolant is added. If you do not do this, air can remain trapped inside the system and you won't get all the air out. On 1998 and later models with 2.7L engine, the valve is ...
...as it is external and not hard to change. Let me know how you make out. Also make sure you change the thermostat and radiator cap not forgeting to bleed all the air out of the system for good
...Air lock scenario and you will need to perform a system Bleed. Park the vehicle on level ground, when cold remove coolant filler cap, start engine and leave to idle, turn heater on full and blower to ...
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