12/10/2023 0 Comments 98 subaru coolant pushed into overflow![]() It's designed this way so the radiator can vent excess pressure without sucking any air in. So here's the thing: the 2-way goes on the expansion tank ONLY. The easiest way to identify these different caps is to look at the bottom - the 1-way will look flat, the 2-way will look like it has a dome. The 2-way.you guessed it, can open either way - to let pressure OUT, or can open under vacuum to pull air (or, in actuality, coolant) back in. These caps will look almost identical, the difference is in how they function: the 1-way can only open in 1 direction (thus the name), to let pressure OUT. Subaru uses two different kinds of radiator caps: a 1-way and a 2-way. Many people put new caps on and if they aren't careful, this will cause a problem. If you haven't replaced your caps recently, it's still possible one of them has failed and this is causing your issue. Subaru does a weird thing with this coolant setup, and if you have replaced any radiator caps recently then it could cause the system to fail - and the failure indicator is overheating. It has one on the radiator itself (which we would expect) but also one on the coolant expansion tank - which I believe is that big round thing towards the front of the engine bay, just left of the centerline of the car. It looks like the 98 Forester, like many Subarus, has two radiator caps. I may have an idea on what's going on here. It has a nasty habit of also clogging things that shouldn't be clogged.īefore doing anything with the headgasket, check this first! Even if you have to borrow the wife's car or take the train while you save up.Īs an aside, don't use StopLeak. The only thing to do is to find out what's wrong and deal with it. I was in the same position last year with my Astra Coupe. ![]() And if you think replacing a headgasket is expensive, wait til you have to have the head skimmed AND have the headgasket replaced. If you leave it as-is, you're going to warp you cylinder head(s). Seeing as you flushed the system and replaced the cap, it is unlikely that you have air trapped in the coolant circuit (I just have a feeling you know about "burping" a car when you replace the coolant). If the compression test says you have bad compression on one or more cylinders, it's your head gasket and there's no way around having it swapped ASAP. They just stick a gauge into each each sparkplug hole and turn the engine over to measure how much "compression" each cylinder makes. If you're lucky, they'll do it for free, otherwise it's not an expensive or long procedure. Only way to be sure is to have a compression test done by a workshop. When they fail in a certain way, they allow exhaust gases to get into the coolant circuit instead of escaping out the exhaust valves like the Lord intended. every combustion chamber will thereafter be a different size so you'll have different compression (and different power) on every cylinder. A machine shop may be able to plane the head, but if they do. If your head is allowed to warp, the car'll never run right again. Even if the leak doesn't get worse fast (which it will), it WILL blow your coolant out, and your car will overheat, and the highest point (the head) will be coolant-starved and suffer from it. ![]() If you drive the car any further before getting the problem fixed, you should count on it getting worse - quickly. It may work to stop minor external leakages from the cooling system to the outdoors, but your leak is INTO the cooling system. Cracked heads are much less common than failed head gaskets, though.Ĭooling system leak sealers will have no effect in any of these cases, short-term or long-term. Third is that fuel/air and exhaust are entering the water jacket through a crack in the head, with results nearly identical to head gasket failure. This sort of failure doesn't necessarily alter the appearance & consistency of the coolant, but may cause a very dramatic overpressure condition within the cooling system. During the compression stroke, and especially during the power stroke, the fuel/air and exhaust are under VERY high pressure, far more than oil pressure. Second is that your fuel/air mix and exhaust gases are entering the water jacket through a breach in the head gasket. That, though, would also give your coolant an obvious "milkshake" appearance & consistency. No, there are three.įirst is that your motor oil is entering the water jacket through a breach in the head gasket - the motor oil is under higher pressure than the coolant should ever be, so it'd pressurize the coolant. no, there's probably nothing you can try before you invest in a head gasket.
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