Yesterday we took "Fay", or Fay took us! to the Kop Hill Climb at Princes Risborough, it was quite a hot day and afterwards had a drive around to cool down, eventually arriving home after about 110 miles of trouble free motoring.
This morning after cleaning her to get rid of all the dust from the Hill Climb field, I was taking her back to her lock up, when I noticed the temperature gauge had passed the 212f mark at the top of the scale; as you have no doubt read at some point, my gauge is always reads too high, but this time it had excelled itself.
I stopped to find a puddle of water under the radiator where I had stopped, I was pretty sure the problem wasn't the radiator as it's not that long ago it was rebuilt.
I eased the cap to the safety position and let the pressure escape, or so I thought,
then released it all the way, only to have hot antifreeze belch it's way all over the engine etc; after letting her cool down I refilled the radiator with 2.5 litres of antifreeze mixture that I carry, I looked around, poking and prodding, and feeling how hot the water manifold was, the hoses and the radiator were, I came to the conclusion that unless it was that the thermostat had stuck, I wasn't sure what the cause might be
no nasty smells from the radiator, no signs of oil in the water,and when restarted was running fine with no missing at all. so a leaking head gasket didn't seem likely.
I then checked the fanbelt to find that I could turn the mechanical fan and belt, while the belt slipped around the dynamo pulley, a good indication the the belt wasn't tight enough, I retightened the belt, then went for about a 6 mile drive, and everything was as normal.
Just surprised that this problem hadn't manifested itself yesterday if the belt was that loose, and that she had overheated with ram air going through the radiator, even if the fastest speed was only 40mph.
Just hope that's all it was.
Brian
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