> Sorry, Mike, it's a 3.1 ! Now, what are the odds? Thanks again. Fred
Thanks, Mike.
With a bad intake gasket, can that also make the coolant reservoir
bubble? The previous owner said he had changed oil with Wal-Mart oil,
which is clear. Looking at the oil, it looked to me like Pennzoil or
Quaker State color, so perhaps this explains the color, and, it is
about a pint overfull.
Fred
> > Sorry, Mike, it's a 3.1 ! Now, what are the odds? Thanks again. Fred
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> but if you drive it long enough with it low on coolant you may blow a head
> gasket also.
aarcuda69062 - 30 Sep 2006 14:35 GMT
In article
<1159590036.142648.305010@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com>,
> Thanks, Mike.
>
> With a bad intake gasket, can that also make the coolant reservoir
> bubble?
No. The bubbles are coming from pressurized gas escaping from
somewhere. Failed intake gaskets can contribute to a failed head
gasket and other mechanical problems though.
> The previous owner said he had changed oil with Wal-Mart oil,
> which is clear. Looking at the oil, it looked to me like Pennzoil or
> Quaker State color, so perhaps this explains the color, and, it is
> about a pint overfull.
A head gasket leaking combustion gasses into the cylinder will
not always manifest itself via contaminated oil.
The correct diagnostic procedure here to rule out or verify a
leaking head gasket is to perform a cylinder leak down test;
Remove spark plugs, bring a cylinder to top dead center with the
valves closed, install leak down tester into the spark plug hole,
pressurize cylinder with compressed air, look for air bubbles in
the coolant tank or radiator fill neck. Repeat on all cylinders
until the leaking cylinder is identified or all cylinders are
ruled out.
Start with the rear bank of cylinders since odds are that this is
where the leak would be because (IME) the rear head gasket fails
more often than the front.
3.1 engines _do_ suffer failed head gaskets.