Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
HomeAnnouncements
Discussion Groups
By Brand
BMWChevroletDodgeFordGMHondaLexusMercedes-BenzNissanPeugeotToyotaVolkswagenOther Brands
By Topic
4x4 CarsRVsDrivingMaintenance & RepairCar AudioCollectible Cars
Country Specific
Australian ForumsUK Forums
ArticlesAuto InsuranceBuyingCars & TechnologyMaintenanceMiscellaneousSafety
DMV Resources
Related Topics
MotorcyclesBoatsMore Topics ...

Car Forum / Honda Cars / November 2004

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

Help!  Head gasket maybe?

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
greg - 18 Nov 2004 01:48 GMT
I have a 1990 honda accord with 348,000km.  recently it began to take longer
to heat up the interior, and yesterday, the car overheated, but it would not
heat up inside the car.  I checked the fluid and the rad was dry, so I
filled it totally up, drove around for about 20km, and the same thing
happened.  the rad was dry again, and the car was running weird.   I'm
hoping its the thermostat.  Would a bad thermostat cause this problem, or am
I looking at a head gasket replacement?  I could neither see nor smell
radiator fluid leaking from under the hood.  Anyone with knowledge have any
ideas?
Michael Pardee - 18 Nov 2004 01:58 GMT
Remove the cap and put the palm of your hand over the radiator opening.
Clamp the hose to the overflow and have somebody crank the engine. If you
feel the alternating pressure and vacuum as the engine is cranked, the head
has to come off. Figure on at least a bad head gasket, and hope the head
isn't warped or cracked.

If it passes that test, refill the radiator and bleed the system. It can be
hard to get the whole system filled on the first refill if it was really
low.

Mike

>I have a 1990 honda accord with 348,000km.  recently it began to take
>longer
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> any
> ideas?
Charlie S - 18 Nov 2004 05:26 GMT
I drove a Datsun with low coolant and blew the head gasket or cracked
the block. I installed SteelSeal per the instructions and it worked.

http://www.steelseal.com/eng/home.html

With the blown gasket or cracked block, I could hear a Tick, Tick,
Tick. During the installation of SteelSeal the Ticking stopped.

If the gasket is blown, you are better to spend $80 for a bottle of
SteelSeal than spend $1000 or more on an Engine repair on such a high
milage car.

SteelSeal is a liquid that you put in the coolant, then you run the
engine to above 212 degrees. At this temperature the SteelSeal reacts
with air in the cracks to solidify.

My mechanic offered to do the job for me but he would not gurantee the
job. I did it myself, and as I said above, it worked.

I wish you luck, Eh.

PS Run the engine with the radiator cap off and look for bubbles.
  Bubbles are cylinder gasses getting into the coolant.

>Remove the cap and put the palm of your hand over the radiator opening.
>Clamp the hose to the overflow and have somebody crank the engine. If you
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
>> any
>> ideas?
jim beam - 18 Nov 2004 06:07 GMT
> I have a 1990 honda accord with 348,000km.  recently it began to take longer
> to heat up the interior, and yesterday, the car overheated, but it would not
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> radiator fluid leaking from under the hood.  Anyone with knowledge have any
> ideas?

those are classic head gasket symptoms.  check under the filler cap.  if
it looks like mayonnaise under there, it's definitely gasket.  if not,
fill the rad & crank the engine with the spark plug leads disconnected.
 then remove them.  if any are wet, again, head gasket.

bad news: the head or block could also be cracked.

good news: if it's the gasket, they're not that hard to do yourself -
easily accessible if it's the 4-cylinder.  just get the book & some
tools to do the timing belt.

bad news: some head or block cracks are hard to detect, so there's a
chance of changing the gasket, putting it all back together, then
finding it's the crack.

good news: used motors for this model are cheap.

whatever the diagnosis, find a reputable shop that's not going to try
selling you a whole new motor if all it needs is a gasket.
jim beam - 18 Nov 2004 14:18 GMT
>> I have a 1990 honda accord with 348,000km.  recently it began to take
>> longer
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> fill the rad & crank the engine with the spark plug leads disconnected.
>  then remove them.

oops!  not clear.  remove the spark plugs & inspect.

>  if any are wet, again, head gasket.
>
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
> whatever the diagnosis, find a reputable shop that's not going to try
> selling you a whole new motor if all it needs is a gasket.
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2008 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.