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Mr Revhead wrote:yeah $90 is the price for one gasket... theres 3 types at 3 different prices![]()
get a teekay test, thats what redmist is talking about.
btw $300 is about right, thats a thermostat $50ish, about about 2.5 hours
...that's exactly what's happening in my case, only that it would happen very shortly after driving through the motorway even nanadriving and no thrashing. i could hear the radiator cap screeeaming like a steam engine under pressure, but yet, no milkiness whatsoever on dipstick or oil cap.deaf_rattle wrote:... caused the coolant system to over pressurise and blow the excess into the overflow bottle and then empty that. resulting in the need of topping it up all the time..
HRT wrote:Thats not a leakdown test at all. Leakdown test is where you get the cylinder you are checking to exactly TDC and use a leakdown tester to put compressed air into the cylinder and measure the amount of leakage of the air. Typically about 10% past the rings. If it is higher then there is a likely leak.
Can use the test for burnt valve, damaged pistons/rings, blow head gasket etc. If you hear air escaping from the exhaust pipe then its an exhaust valve issue, something in the inlet then its inlet valve, excessive air out the filler cap then something with pistons/rings and if you have bubbles coming through the radiator then its likely a blow head gasket.
2fas4u wrote:that's exactly what's happening in my case, only that it would happen very shortly after driving through the motorway even nanadriving and no thrashing. i could hear the radiator cap screeeaming like a steam engine under pressure, but yet, no milkiness whatsoever on dipstick or oil cap.
Akane wrote:then at LEAST take redmist's advice, he does DESTROY race cars.
Akane wrote:2fas4u wrote:that's exactly what's happening in my case, only that it would happen very shortly after driving through the motorway even nanadriving and no thrashing. i could hear the radiator cap screeeaming like a steam engine under pressure, but yet, no milkiness whatsoever on dipstick or oil cap.
Milkyness doesn't always happen, it depends how the headgasket is leaking. But your symptoms does suggest it's a blown head gasket.
I don't suggest you keep driving your car in that state.
Akane wrote:Yeap, because what happens is the combustion pressures will seep through the gasket, depending on how it's leaking, if there is a leak between the cylinder and the water cooling jacket, then the combustion pressure will seep into the cooling system and build up pressure, also heat etc will get in there, not good.
Milkyness in oil goes when there's a leak from the water jacket to the oil channels / galleries.
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
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