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Car Forum / Toyota / Camry / December 2007

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Is replacing the thermostat as easy as it appears?

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CamryMan98 - 18 Dec 2007 00:52 GMT
I have a 97 Toyota Camry LE 4 cylinder and it looks to me like the
Thermostat housing is up high, no draining of radiator looks necessary, two
bolts, pop the new one in and done?  Firestone quoted me $100 to do it for
me, is there something I'm missing, it looks simpler than changing out a
battery?  Any help greatly appreciated.
johngdole@hotmail.com - 18 Dec 2007 02:23 GMT
Replacing the thermostat is a little more difficult than changing the
battery. You'll be doing two jobs in one: coolant drain and refill and
the thermostat change.

Depending on the schedule, you might drain all of half that you can
and refill afterwards with the 50%-50% Toyota red/distilled water or
the pre-mixed pink coolant (add no water). Then burp the system (clear
the trapped air).

There will be some coolant coming out from the thermostat housing so
use some rags to soak it up. Orient the jiggle valve as specified and
use a new gasket. You may not have clear access to the nuts to use a
torque wrench, but to some it doesn't matter.

The coolant and thermostat are two of the few maintenance items I
still insist on Toyota.And exercise the typical precautions:
disconnect the battery, wait for the engine to cool down, etc etc

> I have a 97 Toyota Camry LE 4 cylinder and it looks to me like the
> Thermostat housing is up high, no draining of radiator looks necessary, two
> bolts, pop the new one in and done?  Firestone quoted me $100 to do it for
> me, is there something I'm missing, it looks simpler than changing out a
> battery?  Any help greatly appreciated.
CamryMan98 - 18 Dec 2007 06:09 GMT
I had my coolant changed at a Toyota dealership last year, will the coolant
spill out so badly when I replace the thermostat that I might as well do a
drain and fill anyway or would I be OK just filling up whatever coolant I
lose?

> Replacing the thermostat is a little more difficult than changing the
> battery. You'll be doing two jobs in one: coolant drain and refill and
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
>> me, is there something I'm missing, it looks simpler than changing out a
>> battery?  Any help greatly appreciated.
ransley - 18 Dec 2007 11:50 GMT
> I had my coolant changed at a Toyota dealership last year, will the coolant
> spill out so badly when I replace the thermostat that I might as well do a
[quoted text clipped - 32 lines]
>
> - Show quoted text -

Use a toy thermostat aftermarket are often junk, dont overtighten
parts are aluminum, you will get air in the system and will have to
check it.
johngdole@hotmail.com - 19 Dec 2007 02:55 GMT
It's cleaner to let the coolant drain out of the radiator than from
the inlet housing. In any case make sure the coolant doesn't get into
the alternator and AC compressor clutch or any other electrical
component.

I don't know how much it will drain until the coolant levels at the
housing. You can drain about 2 quarts from the bottom drain first, so
less will come out of the housing. I never reuse drained coolant, but
others may differ. A typical 3/5SFE coolant drain and refill involves
about what, 4 qts? And half of that is distilled water.

I'm sure you can still find Toyota Red around. And pure distilled
water (not with minerals for "taste"), is about 70 cents/gallon at
Walmart.

> I had my coolant changed at a Toyota dealership last year, will the coolant
> spill out so badly when I replace the thermostat that I might as well do a
> drain and fill anyway or would I be OK just filling up whatever coolant I
> lose?
CamryMan98 - 27 Dec 2007 03:07 GMT
A big thank-you to everyone on the board concerning Thermostat replacement.
The worst part of the entire experience were the parts people at AutoZone.
They didn't have the O-Ring gasket I needed and then tried to sell me
another gasket.  I went to the Toyota dealer and the MasterTech took a look
at the gasket AutoZone sold me (at the request of the parts person) and said
it had nothing to do with the repair.  Bought everything at the dealer,
returned everything to AutoZone and the replacement went well.  The advice
about spending $15.00 more at the dealer is GREAT.  HEED IT and save
yourself some grief.

> It's cleaner to let the coolant drain out of the radiator than from
> the inlet housing. In any case make sure the coolant doesn't get into
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>> drain and fill anyway or would I be OK just filling up whatever coolant I
>> lose?
timbirr@mailcity.com - 18 Dec 2007 16:02 GMT
 I had my coolant changed at a Toyota dealership last year, will the
coolant
spill out so badly when I replace the thermostat that I might as well
do a
drain and fill anyway or would I be OK just filling up whatever
coolant I
lose?

Coolant drain time is about 30K, so you have about what, 12-15K on
your coolant....if it were me, I'd just replace what you lose during
the swapout...
 
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