RAYZER
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Kerosene works well for engine flush and seafoam for additive.What kind of additive or flush is suggested?
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Kerosene works well for engine flush and seafoam for additive.What kind of additive or flush is suggested?
If the engine is not building up enough heat a hotter thermostat will not help. The standard thermostat for our engines is 180 degree's . I have never even heard of a different one. The thermostat can be stuck open. If that's the case then a new thermostat is in order. If that is not the issue then you will have to look else where to bring the engine heat up. Like using a radiator cover.How is your thermostat? That milky sludge could indicate the engine is running cold all the time. Does your temp gauge show a good stable operating temperature? IIf the thermostat is working but only holding a low temperature, say 160 deg, I'd go with a higher temp thermostat.
Does the slobbering start as soon as the engine starts to warm up? When the radiator is slobbering, how much pressure is being held behind the cap? If the radiator continues to slobber even with a new cap, maybe there's a damaged seat under the cap, or a crack allowing fluid to bypass the cap.
Agree fully. Here is a very appropriate course of action.if the engine oil is black and not some other shade of grey or cream, there is just no point or reason to flush the crankcase. you will only offend the engine and perhaps cause some other issue. if you have lots of blow-by, there is part of your problem, moisture from combustion going past the rings and into the crankcase. i have to wonder if the seller did not change the oil, how good of a job they did with the rest of it? did they resurface the heads? etc. when you have it running at 180° to 200°, drive it for a couple hundred miles and recheck. if you think you are still losing coolant, let the truck sit for a few days and then loosen the drain plug, do not remove it. see what comes out past the threads, oil or water. water will be on the bottom of the pan until disturbed.
At this point you have nothing to lose by trying the sealer. You can't run it with coolant getting in the oil. The best way to go is pull the heads, that's the only way to see if they are cracked or warped. Also check the block is square.So not a cracked case then? Any way to verify a cracked head without pulling the heads? Could it be cracked, allowing coolant into the combustion chamber, and thats where it is going?
Any harm running it as is, or trying the sealer approach?
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