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Brown radiator fluid
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Brown radiator fluid
Hiya gurus,
I've had a strange thing happen to my radiator fluid over the last few days.
I flushed my radiator a few months ago and all has been sweet. It hasn't overheated or used any water. I use Castrol concentrate at about 33%. Then a few days ago when the really hot weather started down here in Sydney the fluid in the overflow bottle has a brown tinge. I emptied the bottle 2 days ago and filled it with plain water as I was out of concentrate. I then checked this morning and the brown tinge is back so it looks like maybe the rest of the coolant is brown as well. The car still doesn't run hot. I checked the radiator cap and it still has green coloured fluid all around it
I haven't been in any mud and my last trip was at Stockton. The gearbox was a little overheated as some fluid had leaked out of the dipstick hole but it was still fine (the fluid was not burnt). Not sure how it could be related to the engine coolant though.
Any ideas? Rust maybe???
I've had a strange thing happen to my radiator fluid over the last few days.
I flushed my radiator a few months ago and all has been sweet. It hasn't overheated or used any water. I use Castrol concentrate at about 33%. Then a few days ago when the really hot weather started down here in Sydney the fluid in the overflow bottle has a brown tinge. I emptied the bottle 2 days ago and filled it with plain water as I was out of concentrate. I then checked this morning and the brown tinge is back so it looks like maybe the rest of the coolant is brown as well. The car still doesn't run hot. I checked the radiator cap and it still has green coloured fluid all around it
I haven't been in any mud and my last trip was at Stockton. The gearbox was a little overheated as some fluid had leaked out of the dipstick hole but it was still fine (the fluid was not burnt). Not sure how it could be related to the engine coolant though.
Any ideas? Rust maybe???
Have you run your heater since you flushed the cooling system?
When I was replacing my engine I shoved a hose onto the heater inlet into the firewall and flushed it out...water was pretty dirty, then I stuck the hose onto the outlet and back flushed it and a whole heap more dirty water came out.
Maybe you have run the heater a couple of times since the flush and it has contaminated your coolant again??
When I was replacing my engine I shoved a hose onto the heater inlet into the firewall and flushed it out...water was pretty dirty, then I stuck the hose onto the outlet and back flushed it and a whole heap more dirty water came out.
Maybe you have run the heater a couple of times since the flush and it has contaminated your coolant again??
Work - KPD4X4.COM - KPD Industries Australian Distributor of Diesel Power Modules - Germany.
Play - dank's zook
Play - dank's zook
When i flushed it before I made sure the heater was set on high. I did run water through it a few times to make sure all of the old coolant was out as well.dank wrote:Have you run your heater since you flushed the cooling system?
When I was replacing my engine I shoved a hose onto the heater inlet into the firewall and flushed it out...water was pretty dirty, then I stuck the hose onto the outlet and back flushed it and a whole heap more dirty water came out.
Maybe you have run the heater a couple of times since the flush and it has contaminated your coolant again??
How old is the vehicle?
How often is the coolant changed?
It may be corrosion in part of the cooling system eg. Water pump impeller. engine block, cyl head, steel water pipes(if any) and as mentioned above the heater core etc.
When you flush the system, do you remove the drain plug in the block? This is assuming the vehicle has one.
Quite often people will only partially flush the system. This leaves old coolant still in the system which has little to no protection for your cooling system.
Cheers,
Micko
How often is the coolant changed?
It may be corrosion in part of the cooling system eg. Water pump impeller. engine block, cyl head, steel water pipes(if any) and as mentioned above the heater core etc.
When you flush the system, do you remove the drain plug in the block? This is assuming the vehicle has one.
Quite often people will only partially flush the system. This leaves old coolant still in the system which has little to no protection for your cooling system.
Cheers,
Micko
[quote="bogged"]
Whats that old saying that I've modernized for this scenario
"fuked over once, shame on her, fuked over twice, shame on me."
(c) Bogged 2008[/quote]
Whats that old saying that I've modernized for this scenario
"fuked over once, shame on her, fuked over twice, shame on me."
(c) Bogged 2008[/quote]
It still the strangest thing.
There is no loss of power. No coolant loss. No over heating. The oil is fine (looks like oil not milky). There is no smoke from the exhaust and no coolant smell.
The only symptom of anything being wrong is the coolant in the overflow bottle has a brown tinge. Not a milky brown but more of clearish dirt-mixed-in-water kinda brown.
Maybe somehow dirt/fine sand was sucked in during my last Stockton trip?
There is no loss of power. No coolant loss. No over heating. The oil is fine (looks like oil not milky). There is no smoke from the exhaust and no coolant smell.
The only symptom of anything being wrong is the coolant in the overflow bottle has a brown tinge. Not a milky brown but more of clearish dirt-mixed-in-water kinda brown.
Maybe somehow dirt/fine sand was sucked in during my last Stockton trip?
What year and model??? quite often if you use either the green pink or red coolants this is exactlly what happens as there not always compatible, we found green coolant in our hdt fte completely flushed the system 5/6 times added the pink coolant and after a couple of weeks turned a brown color,
it may pay to flush the system and try again
it may pay to flush the system and try again
The old coolant was green. The new coolant is green too. I flushed it about 6 months ago so not sure why the incompatibility would show up so late. Maybe I didn't flush it enough and there is brand incompatibility?
Seems like a reflush is on the cards.
My method of reflushing was:
- drain radiator tank from tap at bottom of radiator
- refill with water
- turn on heater to max and run engine until warm
- repeat until all coolant is flushed - fluid is now clear
- Refill with water and coolant concentrate
- bleed any air with rad cap off
Is this the correct method?
Seems like a reflush is on the cards.
My method of reflushing was:
- drain radiator tank from tap at bottom of radiator
- refill with water
- turn on heater to max and run engine until warm
- repeat until all coolant is flushed - fluid is now clear
- Refill with water and coolant concentrate
- bleed any air with rad cap off
Is this the correct method?
Once you have drained the system, I would remove a heater hose, push the garden hose into it and flush until clean water flows from the fitting you removed the heater hose from. Try flushing in both directions as this gives you the best chance of removing any crud in the system.TheOtherLeft wrote:The old coolant was green. The new coolant is green too. I flushed it about 6 months ago so not sure why the incompatibility would show up so late. Maybe I didn't flush it enough and there is brand incompatibility?
Seems like a reflush is on the cards.
My method of reflushing was:
- drain radiator tank from tap at bottom of radiator
- refill with water
- turn on heater to max and run engine until warm
- repeat until all coolant is flushed - fluid is now clear
- Refill with water and coolant concentrate
- bleed any air with rad cap off
Is this the correct method?
Cheers,
Micko
[quote="bogged"]
Whats that old saying that I've modernized for this scenario
"fuked over once, shame on her, fuked over twice, shame on me."
(c) Bogged 2008[/quote]
Whats that old saying that I've modernized for this scenario
"fuked over once, shame on her, fuked over twice, shame on me."
(c) Bogged 2008[/quote]
I wouldn't think that would be an issue, unless you used stagnant tank water or similar.TheOtherLeft wrote:Could Algae be a problem too?
I used tap water, which maybe wasn't overly clean?
Cheers,
Micko
[quote="bogged"]
Whats that old saying that I've modernized for this scenario
"fuked over once, shame on her, fuked over twice, shame on me."
(c) Bogged 2008[/quote]
Whats that old saying that I've modernized for this scenario
"fuked over once, shame on her, fuked over twice, shame on me."
(c) Bogged 2008[/quote]
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