Cobranut
Well-known member
Well, I did a coolant flush and change today.
I cut the Oetiker clamp and disconnected the lower radiator hose to drain the original coolant.
It appeared clean, orange, and with no noticeable contamination.
I then filled it with distilled water, ran the engine without the pressure cap until the thermostat opened and the radiators got hot, and again drained. I did this 3 more times, filling the reservoir with distilled water each time to get all the old coolant out.
Each time, the radiators got hot in just a few minutes, and everything worked as normal.
Finally, I reconnected the hose with a new clamp, and I filled the system with Peak Final Charge PRO series mixed with 50% distilled water.
When I started the bike this time, the coolant would not circulate, even though the engine temp quickly went above 205 degrees.
The only difference besides the coolant mix is that this time, I filled the reservoir to the proper level, instead of filling it to the top when flushing.
The level was an inch or so below the cold level when I bought the bike, and it never had a cooling problem, but for some reason it refuses to circulate now.
I guess it's possible that the thermostat decided to stick at this very moment, but I wanted to ask if anyone else has had a similar problem.
I guess I'll try tomorrow morning filling the reservoir fully to see if it will help, but I hate to add more coolant just to remove it back down to the proper level later.
If anyone has had a similar experience, what did it turn out to be?
Thanks,
David
				
			I cut the Oetiker clamp and disconnected the lower radiator hose to drain the original coolant.
It appeared clean, orange, and with no noticeable contamination.
I then filled it with distilled water, ran the engine without the pressure cap until the thermostat opened and the radiators got hot, and again drained. I did this 3 more times, filling the reservoir with distilled water each time to get all the old coolant out.
Each time, the radiators got hot in just a few minutes, and everything worked as normal.
Finally, I reconnected the hose with a new clamp, and I filled the system with Peak Final Charge PRO series mixed with 50% distilled water.
When I started the bike this time, the coolant would not circulate, even though the engine temp quickly went above 205 degrees.
The only difference besides the coolant mix is that this time, I filled the reservoir to the proper level, instead of filling it to the top when flushing.
The level was an inch or so below the cold level when I bought the bike, and it never had a cooling problem, but for some reason it refuses to circulate now.
I guess it's possible that the thermostat decided to stick at this very moment, but I wanted to ask if anyone else has had a similar problem.
I guess I'll try tomorrow morning filling the reservoir fully to see if it will help, but I hate to add more coolant just to remove it back down to the proper level later.
If anyone has had a similar experience, what did it turn out to be?
Thanks,
David
 
	 
 
		 
 
		
 ) but I've seen quite a few Spyders that've had large air pockets/bubbles of air trapped in the cooling system after a coolant change, air pockets/bubbles that've needed 'burping' by running the engine at a fast idle to forcibly heat up and circulate the coolant for at least 30 mins/a couple of 'on/off fan cycles' before they've purged all the air pockets out of the system and finally gone back to 'normal' operating; and sometimes those air pockets can fool the system into thinking the coolant is boiling/over-heating when actually it's only the air trapped around the sensor/thermostat housing/in the water pump that's causing the reading/lack of opening/poor or non-existent coolant circulation?!
 ) but I've seen quite a few Spyders that've had large air pockets/bubbles of air trapped in the cooling system after a coolant change, air pockets/bubbles that've needed 'burping' by running the engine at a fast idle to forcibly heat up and circulate the coolant for at least 30 mins/a couple of 'on/off fan cycles' before they've purged all the air pockets out of the system and finally gone back to 'normal' operating; and sometimes those air pockets can fool the system into thinking the coolant is boiling/over-heating when actually it's only the air trapped around the sensor/thermostat housing/in the water pump that's causing the reading/lack of opening/poor or non-existent coolant circulation?!  You can check for any/all this by physically holding/feeling how hot the bottom & top of the radiators and the hoses actually are when the system is reporting those high temps/not circulating coolant - if the gauge says the temp is high but the radiators &/or hoses aren't hot &/or the coolant's not circulating, then either you've got a dud gauge, water pump, thermostat, OR any of those are cavitating &/or the temp sensor is reading the localised temp in a patch of trapped air or coolant that's not circulating.
 You can check for any/all this by physically holding/feeling how hot the bottom & top of the radiators and the hoses actually are when the system is reporting those high temps/not circulating coolant - if the gauge says the temp is high but the radiators &/or hoses aren't hot &/or the coolant's not circulating, then either you've got a dud gauge, water pump, thermostat, OR any of those are cavitating &/or the temp sensor is reading the localised temp in a patch of trapped air or coolant that's not circulating. 



 
 
		 
  
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 It never moves from mid-scale, even when the temp rises to the factory fan cut-in setting of around 225 degrees.
 It never moves from mid-scale, even when the temp rises to the factory fan cut-in setting of around 225 degrees. 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		