Originally Posted by llaprad1
I bet its as simple as air in the coolant, or even a bad connection at the sender. At least those are 2 easy/free things to check.
An aftermarket gauge is great for seeing a real reading instead of the 3-setting (C, normal, H). But the time the OEM needle starts creeping up, you've already overheated.
Does it get "warm" while you're driving, or only when you're stationary?
If it does it while you're stationary, I'd change the T-stat, if its not a big deal for you to do.
I bet its as simple as air in the coolant, or even a bad connection at the sender. At least those are 2 easy/free things to check.
An aftermarket gauge is great for seeing a real reading instead of the 3-setting (C, normal, H). But the time the OEM needle starts creeping up, you've already overheated.
Does it get "warm" while you're driving, or only when you're stationary?
If it does it while you're stationary, I'd change the T-stat, if its not a big deal for you to do.
heh, thanks man.. it happens in stop-n-go traffic, when any movement is really slow... The fans kick on when they're supposed to, the thermostat and radiator cap were changed out a few weeks ago, water wetter was added a week after that, and I watched grinch77 - Craig- bleed the system of air yesterday. There are no signs of coolant coming out of the weep hole on the water pump..
So now i'm waiting to see if stop-n-go traffic in 95+ heat causes it to act up again..
I haven't had a chance to get myself into the right situation, and won't until maybe tomorrow at best.. tonight i have things going on and won't be able to put it through the gauntlet that is driving from downtown Tulsa to Broken Arrow without using the highways in rush hour traffic...