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08-19-2014, 08:39 PM | #1 |
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Overheating
Well, my new Town sedan wants to overheat. Especially if it is over 90 degrees and headed into the sun, under load.
Got home last night from 8 mile trip and it was steaming! Car was sitting 8 years, so I checked the bottom end, Pulled the head and cleaned all carbon out, had the head cleaned, magnafluxd and milled, .010, new head gasket, of course, new points and condenser, rebuilt Distributer, Set the timing, verified full advance travel, went through the Carb, adjusted and running great, had radiator cleaned and repaired., Rebuilt the water pump. Overheated with a thermostat in, today I took it out, and it didn't overheat, but still seemed pretty warm, Outside temps was about 10 degrees cooler. No brakes dragging. Running out of ideas. My roadster will run in these conditions with no issues at all.
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Bill Worden 1929 Roadster 1929 Briggs Town Sedan 1930 Closed Cab pickup Smith Motor Compressor 1951 Ford F1 High Desert Model A's |
08-19-2014, 09:26 PM | #2 |
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Re: Overheating
Get an inexpensive meat thermometer tomorrow and check the water temperature to see just how hot it is getting. Is the water level just a bit too high causing it to steam and bubble over making it look worse than it is?
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08-19-2014, 09:46 PM | #3 | |
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Re: Overheating
Quote:
Had to add over a gallon this morning. Definitely hot.
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Bill Worden 1929 Roadster 1929 Briggs Town Sedan 1930 Closed Cab pickup Smith Motor Compressor 1951 Ford F1 High Desert Model A's |
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08-19-2014, 09:49 PM | #4 | |
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Re: Overheating
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Bill Worden 1929 Roadster 1929 Briggs Town Sedan 1930 Closed Cab pickup Smith Motor Compressor 1951 Ford F1 High Desert Model A's |
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08-19-2014, 09:56 PM | #5 |
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Re: Overheating
1. do a compression test to be sure you are not blowing exhaust into the water jacket, despite what you have done to the head, etc. Be sure to re-torque the head several times; once is NOT enough
2. Double, triple check your timing. A late motor will run hot as can be. Timing screws up more Barners than I could ever have imagined. Despite that you have another A that runs fine. If you have a timing lite, put'er on there just for kicks and giggles. Review Marco's pics of how the rotor should be; it can't hurt. http://www.abarnyard.com/workshop/timing.htm 3. be certain the overflow pipe is up in the rad. as far (high) as it can go; put a large roofing nail in the pipe per wild Bill Williamson (search here) or use a short length of fuel line hose to extend the tube up as high as you can get it; the A water pump is known to wanna pump all its precious water out the overflow report back
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'31 180A Last edited by tbirdtbird; 08-19-2014 at 10:01 PM. |
08-20-2014, 04:26 AM | #6 |
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Re: Overheating
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Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. L.D. I have 40 horses in the garage. Only feed them when I want to take them out. 31 Model A Tudor 55B Nick |
08-20-2014, 07:45 AM | #7 |
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Re: Overheating
Remove the fan belt and fill the radiator to the top, then goose the throttle several times and look for bubbles at the fill neck. This will tell you if you have a leaking gasket. There are also exhaust sniffers made for this, which will detect an exhaust leak into the coolant.
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08-20-2014, 08:03 AM | #8 |
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Re: Overheating
Some good advice above. I think you will find the timimg retarded, at least I hope so, its the easiest to fix.. One other thing you might try is to open the GAV a little more, especially if you are running ethanol fuel. A lean motor will run hotter than normal. Good Luck!
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08-20-2014, 09:02 AM | #9 |
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Re: Overheating
It's been my opinion for some time that the 28-29 Model As are a bit "under-radiator'ed" - or at least more sensitive to adversities in this area.
One of the reasons (probably) that Ford provided a larger and improved thermally radiator for the 1930-31 cars. Above they've talked about "flushing" - both radiator and engine block. Also flow aspect of the pump (which your thermostat tends to correct - but only as a band-aid to flow problems between upper and lower tanks.) And also timing as it affects heat release and conversion of thermal energy into mechanical energy. The radiator may need rodding - sometimes mechanical removal is the only way. The radiator may also be subject to the dreaded "solder corrosion issue" which as the name implies is a corrosion based deterioration of the thermal connection between the radiator fins and the tubes themselves. You may be able to detect this by checking in various spots to see if the fins can be "moved" on the tubes. The problem with these last two failure modes is that they are gradual - and to casual appearance the radiator may be fine - but heat transfer impeded. The fin/solder corrosion issue is particularly difficult since it's probably not time effective to completely re-make an original radiator - and a replacement may be your only option. Hopefully you'll find the solution in the earlier mentioned remedies. Joe K
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08-20-2014, 10:22 AM | #10 |
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Re: Overheating
Thanks for all the suggestions. I am pretty sure I have covered them all. I have determined there is no compression leak into the water jacket, and I am not losing water. (at lower ambient temps I am not losing water at all.) the timing has been checked and double checked, as well as the advance lever travel. The radiator was checked and cleaned by the Radiator guy and is in good shape.
I am guessing I got too much Copper coat on the gasket and it is partially blocking some of the water passages, guess there is only one way to find out..........
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Bill Worden 1929 Roadster 1929 Briggs Town Sedan 1930 Closed Cab pickup Smith Motor Compressor 1951 Ford F1 High Desert Model A's |
08-20-2014, 11:06 AM | #11 |
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Re: Overheating
I'm wondering if a few heating/cooling cycles and a little running shook some crud loose from the block and partially stopped up your radiator again. Even if you were a little heavy-handed with the copper coat, I would'nt think it would be that much.
If you know somebody that has one of those IR heat detectors, check to see if the temps are consistent over the whole radiator. It just seems that you arent rejecting the heat from the water to the air properly, whether its the interior heat transfer surfaces being fouled, or, as mentioned above, the fin/tube connection isnt working correctly. I'd try the vinegar flush and see how it looks before I bought another radiator. Good Luck. |
08-20-2014, 11:32 AM | #12 |
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Re: Overheating
I have taken off the inlet casting on the drivers side of the motor and found alot of rust in the passages between the cylinders. Back flushing, probing and air from the upper neck can dislodge some of this scale. Do you have grease in the block from the waterpump? That dissolves with simple green. Then follow with the vinegar treatment can help to attack the scale. The head is another good source of scale. Scale will plug/restrict the passages, and the nice clean radiator.
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08-20-2014, 11:43 AM | #13 | |
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Re: Overheating
Quote:
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Bill Worden 1929 Roadster 1929 Briggs Town Sedan 1930 Closed Cab pickup Smith Motor Compressor 1951 Ford F1 High Desert Model A's |
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08-20-2014, 02:40 PM | #14 |
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Re: Overheating
To avoid pulling the head and looking for a cracked block in my car I spent alot of time with every other method I could think of to solve a cronic problem of loosing coolant. Back flushing was most effective (the best yield of scale) after the mechanical probing and air blasting from above. There is a dead spot behind #4 you probably will not reach. There is a problem with mismatching head to block where I disremember the block had to be drilled to match a hole in the head between either 1&2, or 3&4, or both locations. Without the holes added there were dead spots.
I would concentrate now on making the block scale free. And restrict the overflow by bill williamsons magic nail. Take the suggestions one at a time. Otherwise, you may miss what the problem really was in the final analysis. Remember slow and methodical is probably the best method, and a case of beer. In the end I learned the block was cracked. |
08-20-2014, 04:50 PM | #15 |
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Re: Overheating
we are all missing something. (although cracked block will be hard to tell from this distance....should still get bubbles in top of rad., tho).
I am having trouble believing head gasket sealant could do this. It would take gobs, and it was overheating BEFORE you re-did the head. I am still wondering if somehow the timing is off. Dimple in timing gear in wrong place? Two dimples? Remove plug #1 and bring # 1 up to TDC slowly while trying to insert the timing pin. Piston should hit top of travel as the pin drops in an earlier suggestion to use a thermometer (the IR guns are great for this) to determine what the actual temp is before going further is also worthwhile
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08-20-2014, 05:44 PM | #16 |
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Re: Overheating
I had the same problem with my tudor four years ago. So ill stick my two cents in and say i had my radiator re-cored and that did it. latecomer
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08-20-2014, 05:51 PM | #17 |
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Re: Overheating
New Bergs Radiator earlier this year fixed my problem.
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08-20-2014, 06:13 PM | #18 |
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Re: Overheating
Bite the bullet and spring for a new radiator! It will either solve the problem or at least eliminate one of the possible causes! Old round tube radiators (especially the 28-29's) were marginal at best when new. No matter what you do to those eight decade old cores, they will never be as efficient as when they were when new and they weren't that great then! I ordered a radiator from Tam's a few years ago on a Monday morning, it was delivered Tuesday afternoon by UPS and I installed it that evening! All my over heating problems vanished and the engine ran so cool (130 degrees max) I had to install a 180 degree thermostat (the 160 degree one I tried first barely raised the coolant temp)! Believe me, I did everything practical to that old round core radiator, but it persisted on having uneven core temps even though it passed the so called flow test easily!
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08-20-2014, 06:34 PM | #19 |
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Re: Overheating
Well ,we may have found the culprit. BTW I don't know if it was overheating before I did the head, as I went through it as soon as I got it. ( and you know they all ran great when last used it in 2006) But I pulled the water intake off and was surprised the inside just didn't look too bad. So off with his head. Well lo a behold the 1/4 inch water passage behind #4 was completely plugged. There was some minor scaling but nothing that looks too serious, but since I am leaving for 10 days, perfect time to fill her up with vinegar and let her cook. seems plausible as it was OK in average temps but above 90 degrees outside and it took off. A real good flushing. put her back together and hopefully.........
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Bill Worden 1929 Roadster 1929 Briggs Town Sedan 1930 Closed Cab pickup Smith Motor Compressor 1951 Ford F1 High Desert Model A's |
08-20-2014, 06:42 PM | #20 |
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Re: Overheating
Radiator....Radiator....Radiator! Don't start by making this harder than it is. Look for the obvious. Ask yourself the important questions? Is this at least a 3 core radiator? Is it in good shape?
I chased this demon for a couple of years and looked for everything before I realized I had a light duty 2 core radiator that worked fine as long as the outside temp was below 90 degrees. Let it get above that and it could not keep up. Start with the radiator and if that is it call Gery at Bergs Radiators and get him to build you one.
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