Can I drive 90 miles with radiator cap loose or off ?
#1
Can I drive 90 miles with radiator cap loose or off ?
new radiator haz a slow leak (coffee cup per 15 minutes) at the bottom
doesn't leak when engine off (unpressurized)
if I drive unpressurized, I should be able to keep enough coolant in there
to make a 90 mile drive to the shop who installed the radiator so they can
replace it.
Do you think I will be OK driving the 99 4runner 1 hr 30 minutes with the cap loose ? normal pressure is .9 atm (13lbs)
I will bring 2 gallons of 50/50 with me, and watch the temp gauge of course.
do ya think I can do this no problem ? move day temp should be in the 70's
doesn't leak when engine off (unpressurized)
if I drive unpressurized, I should be able to keep enough coolant in there
to make a 90 mile drive to the shop who installed the radiator so they can
replace it.
Do you think I will be OK driving the 99 4runner 1 hr 30 minutes with the cap loose ? normal pressure is .9 atm (13lbs)
I will bring 2 gallons of 50/50 with me, and watch the temp gauge of course.
do ya think I can do this no problem ? move day temp should be in the 70's
#2
Registered User
question is whether you are going to lose more with the top being lose or the cup every 50 minutes?
What about putting some pepper in the radiator to see if it slows the leak down until you get it to the shop?
What about putting some pepper in the radiator to see if it slows the leak down until you get it to the shop?
#3
Registered User
iTrader: (1)
Do you have the means to remove the radiator and transport it back to the shop.
With my luck at the worst place that slight leak would get real bad. I would be along side the road now with a towing bill yet.
Something like this happened years ago to a company vehicle the boss said dump water in.
I said it runs out faster then I can pour it in.
Good luck no matter what you decide.
With my luck at the worst place that slight leak would get real bad. I would be along side the road now with a towing bill yet.
Something like this happened years ago to a company vehicle the boss said dump water in.
I said it runs out faster then I can pour it in.
Good luck no matter what you decide.
#4
Registered User
iTrader: (1)
coffee cup every 15 minutes is a slow leak??
you can drive it, just bring a bunch of dH2O with you and top off periodically. watch the temp gauge, should be fine. had to do it a couple times, once in my 4runner last year idling on I-5 in 85 degree weather. bring a book...
I would try and temporary patch the leak though, if the shop won't mind some JB weld or epoxy, lol
you can drive it, just bring a bunch of dH2O with you and top off periodically. watch the temp gauge, should be fine. had to do it a couple times, once in my 4runner last year idling on I-5 in 85 degree weather. bring a book...
I would try and temporary patch the leak though, if the shop won't mind some JB weld or epoxy, lol
#5
Registered User
iTrader: (6)
replace it with a good radiator then take the crappy one back to the shop and get your money back. Just because you can do it (drive 90 miles with leaking radiator) doesn't mean you should. But that's just my opinion so what's risking your engine worth? definately not a radiator to me. Let me know if you decide to do and take before and after pics of your engine bay when you're done. It's going to get messy!
#6
Registered User
iTrader: (1)
had a bad coolant 'explosion' in my old S-10, was traveling along the blue ridge parkway and all of a sudden my passenger side floor was sitting under 2" of antifreeze and more would gush out from the lower heater vent every time I accelerated or went uphill.
made it over an hour to a shop that was open with a fraction of the coolant left in the system, I think I only added a water bottle or two; had to shut it off at stoplights to keep the temp down but made it
made it over an hour to a shop that was open with a fraction of the coolant left in the system, I think I only added a water bottle or two; had to shut it off at stoplights to keep the temp down but made it
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#8
Registered User
It's not the leakage part of the loose cap, it's the lowered boiling point of the coolant that creeps me out. If it starts boiling inside the engine all kinds of bad things happen. 13 psi makes a big difference. Keep it pressurized, and stop as often as you have to to maintain your coolant level above Low....or, as others have said, don't drive it at all.
Sorry, I can't get this to format, this is for water, not coolant, but it's indicative. Unpressurized 50/50 ethylene glycol boils at only 225°F, so its the pressure that keeps your engine from boiling over. Glycol makes a big difference in the freezing point, but not so much in the boiling point.
Boiling Points & Pressures
Pressure Boiling Temp. (Deg. F)
0 212
4 224
7 232
9 237
13 246
14 249
Sorry, I can't get this to format, this is for water, not coolant, but it's indicative. Unpressurized 50/50 ethylene glycol boils at only 225°F, so its the pressure that keeps your engine from boiling over. Glycol makes a big difference in the freezing point, but not so much in the boiling point.
Boiling Points & Pressures
Pressure Boiling Temp. (Deg. F)
0 212
4 224
7 232
9 237
13 246
14 249
Last edited by TheDurk; 10-06-2010 at 11:27 AM.
#9
Registered User
iTrader: (5)
x2...or whatever, lol. Maybe x3?
Anyway, I would NOT risk blowing a head gasket or whatever, due to their mistake. Just IMHO... If you can, take the time to find a ride and remove it, bring it to them... Or, call them and see if they'll have someone drop by and with a new one while picking yours up(a shop did that for me, they felt so bad that I got stranded... Of course, they had delivery trucks cruising all of LA County, all the time.) Might be worth at least asking, "hey, can you help out here, I'm stranded?" eh? Napa did that for me as well, one time. They messed up on a part and it caused me to stall.... their driver dropped one to me where I was visiting and picked up the old one.
Anyway, I would NOT risk blowing a head gasket or whatever, due to their mistake. Just IMHO... If you can, take the time to find a ride and remove it, bring it to them... Or, call them and see if they'll have someone drop by and with a new one while picking yours up(a shop did that for me, they felt so bad that I got stranded... Of course, they had delivery trucks cruising all of LA County, all the time.) Might be worth at least asking, "hey, can you help out here, I'm stranded?" eh? Napa did that for me as well, one time. They messed up on a part and it caused me to stall.... their driver dropped one to me where I was visiting and picked up the old one.
#10
Contributing Member
#11
It's not the leakage part of the loose cap, it's the lowered boiling point of the coolant that creeps me out. If it starts boiling inside the engine all kinds of bad things happen. 13 psi makes a big difference. Keep it pressurized, and stop as often as you have to to maintain your coolant level above Low.
Sorry, I can't get this to format, this is for water, not coolant, but it's indicative.
Boiling Points & Pressures
Pressure Boiling Temp. (Deg. F)
0 212
4 224
7 232
9 237
13 246
14 249
Sorry, I can't get this to format, this is for water, not coolant, but it's indicative.
Boiling Points & Pressures
Pressure Boiling Temp. (Deg. F)
0 212
4 224
7 232
9 237
13 246
14 249
but at the cylinders it'll be way hotter. it should boil a little there constantly (which is OK as long as coolant stays there. if it drops...bad) and overflow some, but ...as long as something is boiling it cannot get hotter till it boils dry. water pump will make sure it stays flowing
since this is not a 'closed zero-air system' with a high mounted water pump. if that was the case, I'd be screwed. I had a car like that once and one little air bubble makes the water pump fail hard.
if i pressurize it and run it, and it overheats, I will need to wait 1/2 hour or more to pop the cap and top off. also I risk blowing the slow leak to a wide open mess. right now, it holds coolant at zero pressure.
if I run unpressurized, at least I can immediately top it up without waiting
----
I spoke to the radiator shop and they said just watch the temp gauge
closely. 1 1/2 hour will not hurt it (and surfing the net and what I know from being an old dinosaur...I agree I can likely do this just fine)
I'll post my outcome and how high my temp gauge went. it is 3 miles city driving, then 85 miles pure interstate, and 2 miles city again to get to the shop. I am gonna float the 'loose pressure cap and 2 gallons of 50/50 on hand) and see how it goes.
lets hope my next thread isn't: got screwed, now shop is fixing my head gaskets.
Last edited by BigBallsMcFalls; 10-06-2010 at 11:27 AM.
#12
Registered User
QUESTION>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Why can't you take out your own radiator?
I wouldn't drive 88 seconds like that, that pushing it.
I wouldn't drive 88 seconds like that, that pushing it.
Last edited by vital22re; 10-06-2010 at 11:48 AM.
#13
Registered User
#14
Registered User
iTrader: (5)
I really find that strange for a Radiator shop to give that type of advice. I'd bet you dollars to donuts that, ....if they had a similar situation, they'd pull the thing, call a buddy, have them drive em over to the shop, wait while it's fixed(20 min???) and drive back without ANYYYYYYYY risk of a 2 day repair in the mix, whatsoever. Not trying to be a paranoid, Debbie downer... but WHY risk anything at all?
Best wishes.... Hope you don't need to make a 'wish' along the way. I guess after all the work I've done to mine... I'm a lil more apprehensive about 'taking chances that aren't necessary'... but still, lol.
Best wishes.... Hope you don't need to make a 'wish' along the way. I guess after all the work I've done to mine... I'm a lil more apprehensive about 'taking chances that aren't necessary'... but still, lol.
#15
Registered User
My approach was intended to NOT have it boil over. Just refill the overflow tank before anything happens--every 15 min. if necessary. If your idea is to run unpressurized until it boils over, and refill with ambient temp liquid, I ....wish you, and your aluminum head engine, luck. I would NEVER deliberately do anything that would let one of these engines boil over even once. A cast-iron I6 sure.
Another old dinosaur
Last edited by TheDurk; 10-06-2010 at 12:31 PM.
#16
Contributing Member
Yeah it will run a little hotter with straight antifreeze (maybe 10 degrees in hot weather) but it won't boil at zero pressure until you get well over 300* F.
#17
Registered User
if i pressurize it and run it, and it overheats, I will need to wait 1/2 hour or more to pop the cap and top off. also I risk blowing the slow leak to a wide open mess. right now, it holds coolant at zero pressure.
if I run unpressurized, at least I can immediately top it up without waiting
if I run unpressurized, at least I can immediately top it up without waiting
All you have to do is get a nice big rag and put it on top of the radiator cap and slowly turn it WITHOUT pushing down till it vents to the overflow and hits the safety stop. Once the pressure has vented press down and turn the cap off.
I've lost count how many times I've done this with zero problems. Also if you don't want to pressurize it just put the cap on and then twist it back till it hits the safety stop. In this position it won't built any pressure and it will keep coolant from sloshing out.
FOG
Last edited by FogRunner; 10-06-2010 at 01:21 PM.
#18
Registered User
AND, if it goes dry, it WON'T alert the driver by steaming/boiling first (and the gauge won't help either) and now you get a seized engine. Boiling can be a good thing.
By the way, what is your source on what happens at 100% unpressurized--the 10°F thing? Have you tried this? (not being combative, just honestly curious).
Last edited by TheDurk; 10-06-2010 at 01:39 PM.
#20
Contributing Member
But there is no advantage in going much over the BP of pressurized 50/50 (226°F). Then all you do is decrease the specific heat and increase the viscosity and you have to ram that liquid through the radiator core. These two factors, added to whatever reduction in WP efficiency you get from running unpressurized (cavitation more likely at zero pressure? not sure here), leads me to worry that you will not be extracting enough heat from the engine to protect it from damage, even though it sure as sh*** won't boil over. At least the thing WAS designed to work with 70/30 in cold climates so why go all the way to 100?
AND, if it goes dry, it WON'T alert the driver by steaming/boiling first (and the gauge won't help either) and now you get a seized engine. Boiling can be a good thing.
By the way, what is your source on what happens at 100% unpressurized--the 10°F thing? Have you tried this? (not being combative, just honestly curious).
AND, if it goes dry, it WON'T alert the driver by steaming/boiling first (and the gauge won't help either) and now you get a seized engine. Boiling can be a good thing.
By the way, what is your source on what happens at 100% unpressurized--the 10°F thing? Have you tried this? (not being combative, just honestly curious).