Hi Guys
Sorry to hog the Forum page again. Just had overheating problems with my Hunter, and need a quick fix to keep the car going.
I first noticed the problem when the temperature gauge started climbing towards 100 degrees. It usually reads around 90 degrees quite reliably. First thoughts were duff electric fan, and on experiment I found the fan itself was operational, but something was wrong with the electrical circuitry and it wasn't being switched on when the temperature got too high.
As a temporary (maybe permanent) repair, I have hard-wired the fan to a large illuminated switch I installed down by the ignition key area. So now I operate it, not some electrical gubbins attached to the engine. I also double-checked that my mod makes the fan blow through the radiator. Despite leaving the fan ON on a couple of days with air temperatures in the upper twenties, the temp gauge still reaches 100+. It doesn't actually boil, but not wanting to push my luck, and each time I stopped for 5 minutes to allow the engine to cool off! Switching on the heater helps, but my feet don't like this!
At a local kit-car meeting (SG7s - great guys & gals with allsorts of kits) in Baldock today, I discussed the problem with a couple of guys. Straight away one culprit suggested was the engine thermostat. I've have just janked it out of the housing and plan to replace it tomorrow. Other thoughts were that the raditor needs flushing out, and/or the fan is too small (it measures 300mm in diameter).
Another surprising idea suggested was that the top & bottom hoses to & from the radiator are coupled upside-down, i.e. the hose from the thermostat housing on the engine (adjacent to the alternator) is coupled to the radiator at the BOTTOM, and the hose from the water pump is coupled to the TOP of the rad, with a top-up cap halfway along the hose. In my experience, these connections are usually the other way around.
Does this upside-down arrangement matter? It should be born in the mind that the car was factory-built 12 years ago with all-new parts, and has done only 10,500mls. Also, I have driven it for 2,000mls without any overheating problems, until this recent heatwave.
Your advice/suggestions would be much appreciated.
Cheers
Mike
Sorry to hog the Forum page again. Just had overheating problems with my Hunter, and need a quick fix to keep the car going.
I first noticed the problem when the temperature gauge started climbing towards 100 degrees. It usually reads around 90 degrees quite reliably. First thoughts were duff electric fan, and on experiment I found the fan itself was operational, but something was wrong with the electrical circuitry and it wasn't being switched on when the temperature got too high.
As a temporary (maybe permanent) repair, I have hard-wired the fan to a large illuminated switch I installed down by the ignition key area. So now I operate it, not some electrical gubbins attached to the engine. I also double-checked that my mod makes the fan blow through the radiator. Despite leaving the fan ON on a couple of days with air temperatures in the upper twenties, the temp gauge still reaches 100+. It doesn't actually boil, but not wanting to push my luck, and each time I stopped for 5 minutes to allow the engine to cool off! Switching on the heater helps, but my feet don't like this!
At a local kit-car meeting (SG7s - great guys & gals with allsorts of kits) in Baldock today, I discussed the problem with a couple of guys. Straight away one culprit suggested was the engine thermostat. I've have just janked it out of the housing and plan to replace it tomorrow. Other thoughts were that the raditor needs flushing out, and/or the fan is too small (it measures 300mm in diameter).
Another surprising idea suggested was that the top & bottom hoses to & from the radiator are coupled upside-down, i.e. the hose from the thermostat housing on the engine (adjacent to the alternator) is coupled to the radiator at the BOTTOM, and the hose from the water pump is coupled to the TOP of the rad, with a top-up cap halfway along the hose. In my experience, these connections are usually the other way around.
Does this upside-down arrangement matter? It should be born in the mind that the car was factory-built 12 years ago with all-new parts, and has done only 10,500mls. Also, I have driven it for 2,000mls without any overheating problems, until this recent heatwave.
Your advice/suggestions would be much appreciated.
Cheers
Mike
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