![]() If you've got a small leak in your radiator, you might not have noticed it by flushing it with your hose. So long as I put coolant in the radiator periodically, the car ran fine. I didn't think the radiator could be empty with the reservoir full. When the radiator emptied, the coolant wouldn't flow and the fans wouldn't go on. Though my reservoir was always at the right level, I guess I had a tiny leak in the radiator. And the overheating stopped! The fans then went on automatically too. When I refilled the system with coolant after checking the thermostat, I poured the coolant directly into the radiator, instead of the reservoir. I checked the thermostat in boiling water. I shorted them to always be on, but it kept overheating. My fans weren't working so I thought that was the cause of the overheating. I was having a similar problem with my '97 Accord. If the fans run most to the time and the air coming out is cold it is not fixed. If the fans are off most to the time and the fans run only about 20% of the time and the fans blow warm air it is fixed. Test after repairs by timing the fan run time. A radiator can flow great but not transfer heat if it is fouled with coolant scale deposits.įrom your description I would repair fans first, replace the radiator, put it all back together. I would flow test the radiator and visually inspect the radiator interior. The most common cause of poor flow in a Subaru is air trapped in the engine block. This gives the relative heath of the water pump. A lot of water should be pushed out when the engine is revved. Test for system flow: Remove the inlet hose to the heater at the firewall. The first test for this is to turn on the A/C, both, one or none will come on. Repair fans: It will overheat at idle without the fans. If this was in my bay I would proceed as follows: The no heat situation persists regardless of engine temperature what little air there is feels the same with the engine cold or fully overheated. There is no heat from the car with the heater on and the fan at full speed, but there is also very little air flow from the vents. The car overheated on 3 mile test drive and didn't cool off at all despite coasting the second half of that drive at 35mph with a manual transmission. There is a bypass line before the thermostat, but I don't remember looking at a coolant schematic so I couldn't say where that line goes for sure. When I replaced it yesterday I suggested we install the thermostat, et voila, heat issues return. Eventually Dad removed the thermostat entirely and the car ran fine until the water pump seal failed. This was when the first two thermostats were installed. Things got a little better, but the car still overheated. The garage that sold the car replaced the water pump after the sale, then when that didn't fix anything they said the radiator was clogged and flushed it. The car was purchased used and had cooling issues from the start. ![]() Everything worked fine with no thermostat (and no radiator fans), but the seal failed in the water pump after maybe 5-10k miles.HOWEVER, as there is no flow through the radiator (lower radiator hose and bottom driver's quarter of the radiator are COLD), my first concern is getting flow through the radiator and then I'll worry about the radiator fans. This will sound crazy, but neither radiator fan works.Is there another test we can do to check it? I would think that any flow through the radiator would get the whole thing at least warm and definitely warm up the lower radiator hose. I would love it if it were the radiator as it's extremely easy to swap out, but a garden hose on one end passed (clear) water through without backing up on the inlet side. ![]() Is it possible to have coolant flow through the engine blocked? I'm at a loss it seems like there's a no flow condition, but a garden hose in one end of the radiator got water flowing out the other end and the thermostat(s) have all been tested. The radiator is cold by the lower hose, then warm in an arc around the cold section, then hot along the top and on the entire passenger half of the radiator. I just got home from replacing the water pump. The car has been parked on an inclined and filled with coolant, been jacked up and filled, we've used the cap to vent, we've used the bleeder to vent.įor a while, he ran without a thermostat, but the seals in the water pump failed. They have all been put in boiling water, and they all opened. The thermostat has been replaced 3 times now. The upper radiator hose is extremely hot, the lower radiator hose is cold. It overheats, and there doesn't appear to be flow through the cooling system. My dad has a 1993 Subaru Legacy L 2.2L (no turbo) with a perplexing cooling problem.
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