UGH coolant leak=overheating=fail
Man I had a shitty day today. As soon as I got on the highway during rush hour my car started overheating. I turned on the heat to try to bring the temp down but it was blowing cold air :thinking:.
Anyway I got the car towed to a shop and after replacing the thermostat all was fine again, except for coolant line on the turbo leaking. I don't understand why my 8 month old Nissan thermostat would have failed nor why all of a sudden my coolant hose was leaking? Too much pressure build up?
Anyway I want to prevent this from occuring again because it wasn't fun having to wait for a tow truck (this was the first time my car has been towed). It also wasn't fun having to wait over 2 hours for the car to cool down just so the tech could get to the coolant line behind the turbo.
What I am thinking is get a set of the OEM hardlines and banjo bolts to mount to the turbo and then mount the rubber heater hoses to those lines. This way if this ever happened again, everything would be in reach and I wouldn't get stranded. The way I figure is the hardlines could resist more wear and tear and probably unlikely to fail in the event the thermostat fails again.
I am thinking of doing something with a quick release fitting. Has anyone done this before?
Anyway I got the car towed to a shop and after replacing the thermostat all was fine again, except for coolant line on the turbo leaking. I don't understand why my 8 month old Nissan thermostat would have failed nor why all of a sudden my coolant hose was leaking? Too much pressure build up?
Anyway I want to prevent this from occuring again because it wasn't fun having to wait for a tow truck (this was the first time my car has been towed). It also wasn't fun having to wait over 2 hours for the car to cool down just so the tech could get to the coolant line behind the turbo.
What I am thinking is get a set of the OEM hardlines and banjo bolts to mount to the turbo and then mount the rubber heater hoses to those lines. This way if this ever happened again, everything would be in reach and I wouldn't get stranded. The way I figure is the hardlines could resist more wear and tear and probably unlikely to fail in the event the thermostat fails again.
I am thinking of doing something with a quick release fitting. Has anyone done this before?