New Here?
Toggle Content
   

Toggle Content User Info
Welcome

Anonymous

Nickname
Password
Register

Membership:
Latest: Puggingalong
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 17129

Online Now [143]:
Visitors: 142
Bots: 1
Members: 0
Staff Online Now:

No staff members are online!
Page Views:
Today: 83981
Total: 101291118

Toggle Content Main Menu
 General Info Goodies Search Web Stats Members
 Donations

 

Forums › The Car › 206 Problems › Missing Coolant


 
 

Missing Coolant
Forum Index206 Problems
Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3  Next
Reply to topic Printer Friendly Page watchs.gif View Previous Topic View Next Topic
Author
Message
macca1411
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 7:01 am Up
Staff - Moderator


Offline

Joined: Jan 29, 2011
Posts: 6526
Trade Rating: +10
Location: Westhoughton, Lancashire


Lecktorious wrote:
macca1411 wrote:
We used to drop a couple of raw eggs (works better than Radweld) into the radiator to plug a leaky hole
Leave the engine to run for a while and the egg is forced into the hole from the pressure . It cooks and seals it like a rubbery grommet. It's only supposed to be a make do and mend solution but I've known it last for a while.

Bodge. Some cooked eggs won't stop the a**e falling out the radiator if it's rotten.

If the bottom of the radiator was falling out, you would be loosing more than a bit of coolant. Might be a bodge repair on a small hole, but it's enough to get you running until you can get the problem fixed properly. I can remember brazing and soldering radiators to fix them when they were falling to bits. That was in the days of the proper brass and copper radiators and not the crappy plastic substitutes they use today.

View user's profile
206HdiGti
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 7:03 am Up
Loving the 206 Experience


Offline

Joined: Oct 05, 2012
Posts: 367
Trade Rating: 0


The car is still running, I just am getting fed up of having to top the coolant up once a week. I'm still using it, sorry if I mislead you.
View user's profile
bezford
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 7:29 am Up
Dedicated Member


Offline

Joined: Apr 19, 2012
Posts: 529
Trade Rating: 0
Location: darlington


there's some really good coolant sealers about these days...some claim to bridge cracks in engine blocks and such mega claims...now while they may or may not fix cracks in blocks im sure they will fix a leak in a rad. or a pipe/coupling...rad weld type stuff it is.
R.HYDE
View user's profile
kandlbarrett
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 7:51 am Up
206 Crazy


Offline

Joined: Aug 04, 2011
Posts: 1343
Trade Rating: 0
Location: Swindon


If you really have a leaking radiator replace it. They aren't very expensive and if that dribble turns into a flow you will be looking at a headgasket or engine rather than a rad change.

Also possible recocvery costs from the motorway hard shoulder and the 2 hr wait in the cold that accomanies it.

Morris 1000, Austin 1100, Escort Mk2, Fiat Mirafiori, Alfa 33, Alfa GT Junior, Alfasud, Alfetta GTV (2x), Alfa 164 3.0 V6, Alfa 164 2.0, Alfa 75 V6, Alfa 156 2.4 (diesel remapped 200bhp), Alfa 147 GTA (3.6 295bhp), Alfa 159 (diesel remapped 245bhp 300ft.lbs @ 2500rpm)
Why isn't my daughter an Alfaholic?
View user's profile
Quarmbo
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 8:12 am Up
Paid up Member of the Info Exchange


Offline

Joined: Feb 08, 2010
Posts: 2194
Trade Rating: +2
Location: Bristol & Leicester


Replace the faulty part and do not rely on products like radweld. I've recently suffered a HG failure as a previous owner had splurged the coolant system with radweld. Too much radweld = ineffective cooling system = HG failure over time.
Ford SportGay-A
View user's profile
NathanG
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 8:50 am Up
Loving the 206 Experience


Offline

Joined: Feb 07, 2010
Posts: 314
Trade Rating: +1
Location: Ebbw Vagas (Wales)


I had a leak like this in a Fiat Sceinto, turned out to be a core plug. Changed it, never lost coolant again.
 
View user's profile
kandlbarrett
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 9:25 am Up
206 Crazy


Offline

Joined: Aug 04, 2011
Posts: 1343
Trade Rating: 0
Location: Swindon


quarmbo: +1
Morris 1000, Austin 1100, Escort Mk2, Fiat Mirafiori, Alfa 33, Alfa GT Junior, Alfasud, Alfetta GTV (2x), Alfa 164 3.0 V6, Alfa 164 2.0, Alfa 75 V6, Alfa 156 2.4 (diesel remapped 200bhp), Alfa 147 GTA (3.6 295bhp), Alfa 159 (diesel remapped 245bhp 300ft.lbs @ 2500rpm)
Why isn't my daughter an Alfaholic?
View user's profile
206HdiGti
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 9:44 am Up
Loving the 206 Experience


Offline

Joined: Oct 05, 2012
Posts: 367
Trade Rating: 0


I never had the intention of pouring in a bodge liquid.

Though I have fixed my engine block pitting on my MR2 with titanium putty, but that isn't run of the mill stuff you can get from Halfrauds! I still wouldn't use that on a pipe or a radiato.

If you are going to fix a problem, fix it properly and buy the correct equipment and product.

The radiator will be purchased this week and fitted on Saturday.

View user's profile
bezford
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 10:25 am Up
Dedicated Member


Offline

Joined: Apr 19, 2012
Posts: 529
Trade Rating: 0
Location: darlington


They sell them now that are supposed to fix a headgasket leak/breach but i tried one that was about£12 from the same company as radweld...blue bottle orange cap and label...

Needless to say it didnt work but it was on a mgzr and those k series engines nearly always go and are a b***h...so i wouldnt really recommend tjis but it must work in some cases or they couldnt sell the stuff under false advertising...

Dont forget if the h.g. has gone ...on a mgzr its either £12 or its £800 to £1200 depending on garage so if u can get away with the £12 its a hell of a saving and maybe worth a try???

R.HYDE
View user's profile
Lecktorious
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 11:27 am Up
Member can now request Custom Stars


Offline

Joined: Feb 07, 2010
Posts: 3666
Trade Rating: +59
Location: Scotland


bezford wrote:
They sell them now that are supposed to fix a headgasket leak/breach but i tried one that was about£12 from the same company as radweld...blue bottle orange cap and label...

Needless to say it didnt work but it was on a mgzr and those k series engines nearly always go and are a b***h...so i wouldnt really recommend tjis but it must work in some cases or they couldnt sell the stuff under false advertising...

Dont forget if the h.g. has gone ...on a mgzr its either £12 or its £800 to £1200 depending on garage so if u can get away with the £12 its a hell of a saving and maybe worth a try???

What?

'98 Nile Blue 306 GTi 6
'04 Obsidian Black 206 GTi 138
View user's profile
macca1411
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 12:05 pm Up
Staff - Moderator


Offline

Joined: Jan 29, 2011
Posts: 6526
Trade Rating: +10
Location: Westhoughton, Lancashire


THey might make it, and would be ideal in an emergency situation to get you home a bit like the tyreweld stuff, but I would still want to do the proper repair as soon as possible.

 
 

View user's profile
kandlbarrett
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 12:22 pm Up
206 Crazy


Offline

Joined: Aug 04, 2011
Posts: 1343
Trade Rating: 0
Location: Swindon


Tyreweld: in my opinion = junk. Our company cars do NOT come with spare wheels but a can of tyreweld. My supervisor got a puncture that Tyreweld would not fix. He got to work so late that it was too late to even start the job and he was the only person planned for that shift with the skills to supervise the 350T crane.

Cost of crane, other plant, labour and overall delays to the job exceeded £180k.

All my staff now have cars now have a real (not space saver) spare wheel.

Morris 1000, Austin 1100, Escort Mk2, Fiat Mirafiori, Alfa 33, Alfa GT Junior, Alfasud, Alfetta GTV (2x), Alfa 164 3.0 V6, Alfa 164 2.0, Alfa 75 V6, Alfa 156 2.4 (diesel remapped 200bhp), Alfa 147 GTA (3.6 295bhp), Alfa 159 (diesel remapped 245bhp 300ft.lbs @ 2500rpm)
Why isn't my daughter an Alfaholic?
View user's profile
206HdiGti
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 2:07 pm Up
Loving the 206 Experience


Offline

Joined: Oct 05, 2012
Posts: 367
Trade Rating: 0


Did I say my head gasket has gone? No.

Chances are the old coolant however many years old it was, was blocking up a tiny hole so when the new stuff was put through it dislodged all the old crap and made the leak more evident.

An air compressor vacuum tool was used to suck out all the air prior to coolant going in so there was no air in the system when the coolant was put through. But since then it developed a leak.

View user's profile
kandlbarrett
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 2:32 pm Up
206 Crazy


Offline

Joined: Aug 04, 2011
Posts: 1343
Trade Rating: 0
Location: Swindon


206HdiGti: Ignore future posts here; your problem is diagnosed.
Morris 1000, Austin 1100, Escort Mk2, Fiat Mirafiori, Alfa 33, Alfa GT Junior, Alfasud, Alfetta GTV (2x), Alfa 164 3.0 V6, Alfa 164 2.0, Alfa 75 V6, Alfa 156 2.4 (diesel remapped 200bhp), Alfa 147 GTA (3.6 295bhp), Alfa 159 (diesel remapped 245bhp 300ft.lbs @ 2500rpm)
Why isn't my daughter an Alfaholic?
View user's profile
206HdiGti
PostPosted: Mon Jan 07, 2013 3:09 pm Up
Loving the 206 Experience


Offline

Joined: Oct 05, 2012
Posts: 367
Trade Rating: 0


I know and I appreciate the knowledge thank you Smile
View user's profile
Reply to topic Printer Friendly Page watchs.gif View Previous Topic View Next Topic All times are GMT
Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3  Next
Forum Index206 Problems

Page 2 of 3
  You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum

 
We are not responsible for comments posted by our users, as they are the property of the poster
Interactive software released under GNU GPL, Code Credits, Privacy Policy