MrMarty51
Well-Known Member
1991 Oldsmobile 3.8 V6. Labeled as a 3800.
Heater not putting out hot air.
Thermostat removed.
Pull both heads or just rearward unit ?
Heater not putting out hot air.
Thermostat removed.
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or just rearward unit ?
Heater not putting out hot air.
When I filled the engine with coolant after replacing the intake manifold gaskets
He pointed out one spot where He thought it looked like the gasket had been leaking.
There is no screw to burp this particular engine
WOW, that is some excellent information and very educational, detailed as well.Don’t be afraid to add a bleeder valve somewhere, or like hummers in a couple places. But even with that some systems simply are a mess to bleed. Some cars simply can not be bled and require a vacuum/fill system.
I bought the mightyvac mv4525. At $300 nowadays that’s painful but a complete kit for vacuum filling, pressure testing system and radiator caps if you get the adapter. Also thermometer test while system is pressurized.
But you could just get a similar device or the few components and diy one.
Basically after assembling the system to the point you would normally fill with coolant you attach the radiator (or surge tank) cap which has a valve on it. Use shop air (or if diy rigged set up your hvac vacuum) to pull the coolant system into a vacuum. Then close the valve and wait. It should hold a vacuum, if it looses vacuum there is a leak somewhere to find. Most guys listen and find it, if not they dump the vacuum, pressurize with the pressure tester and use soapy water to spray for bubbles.
Pull back into vacuum and wait again, it holds vacuum Then you drop the hose into your coolant open valve and the vacuum draws the coolant into your system filling everything 100% eliminating the need to bleed air. It is best to dump all your coolant into a 5 gallon bucket before beginning. You don’t want to keep opening and closing valve to move hose from bottle after bottle if you can avoid it.
On hummers/hmmwv they hold 6.5 gallons of coolant stock, more for 4 core radiators so I just pour in the other bottles as it is drawing in the coolant.
It will draw in coolant until the system is completely full. So long as the hose was kept submerged the entire time there will be no air in the system.
There are many versions of this tool- this one eliminates all the problems of the cheaper ones, and is multiple tool kits in one. Search on YouTube “vacuum fill coolant system” and you can see many versions and how they work. You’ll see multiple guys have more than one tool, and some show a fill kit and a pressure test kit as separate units.
When I was a Mac tools distributor for a few years I sold many like the airlift and others. I haven’t done a video using one, but made the video below showing a couple guys the one I recommend- one guy who already owned a cheap version.
I almost never work on rigs anymore but when I do need to do anything inna coolant system again I will make a video demonstrating this one in use.
Here is me showing the tool alone. I forgot to show- it does not include the adapter to test radiator caps- those are specific to your cap but tons are available cheap online and all work.
Hoo boy.You verified you have flow through the heater with a garden hose and the in/out was hot? Stop leak a PO used (or customer) clogging the core?
What exact problems did this engine/vehicle have before you started the repairs? Generally the intake leak is a problem by itself but low coolant could overheat things till head gaskets let go and heads crack.
You were looking for a blown head gasket, why?
This is very good news! Odds are very good he is correct with experience.
Production changes to solve "problems" are very common. The 3.1L engines of this vintage had a bleeder screw on the T-Stat housing. What is the highest point in the system?
I’m not sure if they are vacuum or electronical controlled.Marty, Just out of curiosity, does this unit have a vacuum controlled heater valve? sometimes they can get sticky and ether stay full open flow or stuck shut blocking flow.
The machine shop owner checked them with a straight edge and declared them to be flat.Why not deck the heads, it's not expensive.
just look along the heater hoses from the block to the firewall and see if there is some sort of valve inline with one of the heater hoses. if there is not, then its flowing coolant all the time. my thought was if it had a heater valve that it might be stuck and why you weren't getting heat from the heater.I’m not sure if they are vacuum or electronical controlled.
Maybe tomorrow I’ll crawl under the dash and take a peek at the heater box.
Nope. No inline heater valve. Just heater hoses and nipples. I like nipples.just look along the heater hoses from the block to the firewall and see if there is some sort of valve inline with one of the heater hoses. if there is not, then its flowing coolant all the time. my thought was if it had a heater valve that it might be stuck and why you weren't getting heat from the heater.