88 RRC (3.5 engine), new to me a few weeks back. Getting it sorted. Long list but a good one.
Replaced t-stat as it was stuck open & replaced some hoses while in there. Now it almost pegs the gauge quickly (I turn it off before it hits red!).
Any tricks from the 3.5 crowd on how I bleed this? (have tried nose up, bled 6 times, get some small bubbles, t-stat does seem to eventually open)
Backstory on why I did all this:
-- Upon my purchase, I noticed it would run 1/4 or so on the temp gauge, and never really any hotter - Replaced t-stat w/ genuine Rover and a few hoses (top & bottom radiator, the two hoses around the water pump into heater pipes). Didn't get to the rear heater pipe hoses yet.
-- Cooling system looked in good shape, no sediment, I took out radiator when I did this and turned it upside down, looked in great shape, no rust/sediment.
-- This truck has the old metal tank, and old skool "no y-hose" system
-- Unrelated: I also replaced all 4 v-belts preventatively (was getting some squeal on cold start) and all vacuum lines.
Pic of which cooling system parts I have for reference.
Now -- to my problem. The temp gauge which seems to work properly gets close to red really quickly. In 10 mins this morning in driveway idling. And in 5 blocks of driving. I did the normal rad plug / expansion tank off, tried to bleed.
Yesterday, I wasn't getting heat. Today bled it again, now I get some heat inside although I wouldn't describe it as blazing. Maybe an improvement but still gets hot very quickly.
Do I just need to keep bleeding (front right elevated, via radiator cap)?
Top radiator hose does get hot eventually and I get some bubbles occasionally from the burping at the radiator top plug. But not the big "burp" when the stat opens like I'd hope.
I've bled it 6 times now ... which is why I ask. At this point I don't suspect something like head gasket or whatever else... since it was running cool and well before this t-stat replacement. And I'm very careful not to actually run it too hot here while bleeding. My neighbors are annoyed with all the idling in my driveway with "my new project"... sigh.
Replaced t-stat as it was stuck open & replaced some hoses while in there. Now it almost pegs the gauge quickly (I turn it off before it hits red!).
Any tricks from the 3.5 crowd on how I bleed this? (have tried nose up, bled 6 times, get some small bubbles, t-stat does seem to eventually open)
Backstory on why I did all this:
-- Upon my purchase, I noticed it would run 1/4 or so on the temp gauge, and never really any hotter - Replaced t-stat w/ genuine Rover and a few hoses (top & bottom radiator, the two hoses around the water pump into heater pipes). Didn't get to the rear heater pipe hoses yet.
-- Cooling system looked in good shape, no sediment, I took out radiator when I did this and turned it upside down, looked in great shape, no rust/sediment.
-- This truck has the old metal tank, and old skool "no y-hose" system
-- Unrelated: I also replaced all 4 v-belts preventatively (was getting some squeal on cold start) and all vacuum lines.
Pic of which cooling system parts I have for reference.
Now -- to my problem. The temp gauge which seems to work properly gets close to red really quickly. In 10 mins this morning in driveway idling. And in 5 blocks of driving. I did the normal rad plug / expansion tank off, tried to bleed.
Yesterday, I wasn't getting heat. Today bled it again, now I get some heat inside although I wouldn't describe it as blazing. Maybe an improvement but still gets hot very quickly.
Do I just need to keep bleeding (front right elevated, via radiator cap)?
Top radiator hose does get hot eventually and I get some bubbles occasionally from the burping at the radiator top plug. But not the big "burp" when the stat opens like I'd hope.
I've bled it 6 times now ... which is why I ask. At this point I don't suspect something like head gasket or whatever else... since it was running cool and well before this t-stat replacement. And I'm very careful not to actually run it too hot here while bleeding. My neighbors are annoyed with all the idling in my driveway with "my new project"... sigh.