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View Full Version : My baby is running hot! Too HOT!!



Calico_NC
03-24-2007, 10:27 PM
Last night while on the prowl for some Krispy Kreme Donuts, I noticed my temp gauge moving fast towards the red zone. I was driving the car for about 30-45 minutes prior to this happening. I pulled over and popped the hood, lots of steam and bubbles were coming out of the radiator. It has been working fine for a while now, but something is wrong with it. How do I find out if it has air in the system?

:(

markus
03-24-2007, 10:46 PM
i think u need a new radiator my friend.

BigTed00
03-24-2007, 10:49 PM
cooling system woes :(

i feel your pain brother, lately the 535 has been slurping down the coolant......looks like ill have some fun ahead of me before summer hits.........hell it cant be worse the the e36 radiator replacement can it?

Calico_NC
03-24-2007, 11:44 PM
i think u need a new radiator my friend.

i probably do, seeing that the rubber neck had broken slightly when installing the aux fan about a year ago. Could I do anything else besides getting a new radiator? This is what happens:

When driving, the car starts off fine. I can drive for at least 4-5 minutes b4 anything starts to run terribly wrong. Then, the needle starts to work its way up to the red zone. Then I have to cut it off and wait for it to cool. When it cools to about half way, i can go about another 2 minutes or so.

I got stuck at the mall, which is about 10 minutes out from my house, took me about an hour to get home.:(

Dave M
03-25-2007, 01:56 AM
Your engine has overheated (at least once). What to do? Don't let it happen again. You have a major cooling system failure. You should feel lucky that you've home-jobbed a cooling system and lived to fight another day.
All engines "start off fine", because they're cool. You apparently have a failing rad, water pump or hose. Replacing the rad, water pump, thermostat and fan clutch is cheaper than replacing your M50 cylinder head or block.

When "lots and steam and bubbles" are being generatd by the engine, it means that something is terribly wrong. Let us know exactly what is happening.

Dave

stargazer_61
03-25-2007, 03:58 AM
Calico,

If you need some help replacing that rad, let me know. I'm in Kernersville.

etcetera
03-25-2007, 02:39 PM
4-5 minutes seems really quick to get that warm. Bleeding the system might be worth a try. As long as the cooling system is full with no bubbles it should take longer than that just to warm to normal, radiator or no. Sounds like you need to replace the radiator anyways, but you'll never know what the problem was if you don't bleed first.

When I drive to my office It's just barely warmed up, 10-15 minutes. The thermostat probably hasn't even opened yet. That's with the temps in the 60's to 80's.

genphreak
03-25-2007, 02:51 PM
A bleed will fix the symptom, not the cause.

Don't mess with it too much, you risk blowing your head gasket. Diagnose some tests and ascertain the exact reason with a book and/or this board. If it fails in these cars you don't wanna keep drivin them at all. They are performance designs that rely on their cooling systems completely. :) Nick

rickm
03-25-2007, 07:14 PM
I had the same thing last summer. The overheating came *very* quickly (I was driving down a twisty mountain road and looking at the temp gauge was the last thing on my mind). Finally noticed it and pulled over. Popped the hood, it was a steam bath. Part of the radiator had cracked (the plastic part up top). Let it cool for 20 min then drove 2 minutes down the road until I had (a) a flat place to park and (b) a cell signal. Had it towed since I was a good 40 minutes home.

Replaced the radiator, water pump (metal impellers this time) and the hoses since they were off. Not a problem since. I was scared that I had cooked the engine but when I had my mechanic check it out he said it showed no visible damage.

Calico_NC
03-25-2007, 07:48 PM
thanks everyone for the input,
To Stargazer:
Do you know of any good mechanics around this area besides the dealer?

Rickm: I think the plastic part at the top of the radiator is broken as well, because i noticed something cracked with steam and bubbles coming from it.

Overall, what radiator would everyone recommend? Just a regular Behr or something different?

rickm
03-25-2007, 08:10 PM
I bought a Nissen.

No idea about repair shops, you could contact the BMW CCA guy in your area (scotthanf@hammerpatent.com) to see if he has anyone he can recommend. I thought there was a place there that did BMW and Volvo...Murray?

stargazer_61
03-26-2007, 04:27 PM
thanks everyone for the input,
To Stargazer:
Do you know of any good mechanics around this area besides the dealer?

Rickm: I think the plastic part at the top of the radiator is broken as well, because i noticed something cracked with steam and bubbles coming from it.

Overall, what radiator would everyone recommend? Just a regular Behr or something different?

Calico - I've been to Motorsport Connections in Winston a couple of times for parts. Nice people & reasonable prices.

http://www.motorsport-connections.com/

granit-silber (Ashley) had said once that there was a decent shop down 68 going towards High Point, but I can't remember where.

Good luck!

Montreal525
03-26-2007, 10:40 PM
I would check if you have heat in the car, if the heater works. If not, it's probably the water pump, no circulation of the coolant, no heat inside. If so, expect to find this...

Jeff

Ferret
03-27-2007, 07:16 AM
If it's overheating that quick it's likely to be exactly as Jeff/Montreal525 says... pull your waterpump and have a nosey...

I had one of these b*stards fail after just six months... not impressed with it.

EDIT: I only located its impeller blades when I took the head off a few weeks later and found them in the coolant rail at the back of the head. They'd managed to travel the full length of the engine :@

With the small leak you've got, the engine shouldnt really be overheating that badly - it'll steam and run warmer than usual, but I'm wondering if the leak has been caused by overpressuring from a pump failure?

Calico_NC
03-28-2007, 05:40 PM
I would check if you have heat in the car, if the heater works. If not, it's probably the water pump, no circulation of the coolant, no heat inside. If so, expect to find this...

Jeff

im going to look into this. I have to check and see.

Calico_NC
03-28-2007, 06:32 PM
i think it is the water pump, because i tried turning on the heat, and the AC continued to blow cold air despite the car being hot. Is that diagnosis correct? Seems kinda fishy b/c i replaced that pump probably about a year ago i think. Oh well!

Ferret
03-29-2007, 06:45 AM
i think it is the water pump, because i tried turning on the heat, and the AC continued to blow cold air despite the car being hot. Is that diagnosis correct? Seems kinda fishy b/c i replaced that pump probably about a year ago i think. Oh well!

Yeah either you've got a massive airlock or your pumps busted bad... I'd have a nosey if I were you.

Montreal525
03-29-2007, 09:03 AM
I had a NEW one with plastic impeller (I had asked for a metal one but they installed a plastic one anyway....) and it failed after 6 months so....

Jeff

Calico_NC
03-31-2007, 03:05 PM
I had a NEW one with plastic impeller (I had asked for a metal one but they installed a plastic one anyway....) and it failed after 6 months so....

Jeff

thanks everybody for the info, Just got a new Nissen Radiator, and it works like a charm. I guess it was just a bad airlock or something b/c the heat works flawlessly as well. Now on to trouble shoot that darn "1221" code on the dash.

"Lord give me strength!"

632 Regal
03-31-2007, 05:47 PM
vacume leak?

thanks everybody for the info, Just got a new Nissen Radiator, and it works like a charm. I guess it was just a bad airlock or something b/c the heat works flawlessly as well. Now on to trouble shoot that darn "1221" code on the dash.

"Lord give me strength!"