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Date:         Mon, 3 Feb 2003 21:55:20 -0500
Reply-To:     Marc Perdue <marcperdue@ADELPHIA.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Marc Perdue <marcperdue@ADELPHIA.NET>
Subject:      Just when I thought it was safe to trust my Westy...another long
              story
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

First, update on the breather hose: Couldn't find a darn thing that would work as a solution to the kinked oil breather hose. Out of frustration and the need to have a vehicle running today, I plugged one end of that heater device into the rubber boot that connects to the mass airflow sensor. Then I took the little short breather hose out. It was also shot. Put the long, straight, new breather hose on the other end of the heater and plugged it onto the oil breather tower. Seemed like a good idea to get rid of the kink and shorten the amount of hose there. Voila, no more oil blasting out of wherever it was coming from! The question is, does anybody know of a downside to putting that heater where I did? I suppose that, since it's now higher, its function is no longer relevant because the water will collect on the low end of the hose. Unfortunately, I couldn't plug the heater directly into the tower, else I would have . . .

So, thinking I was good to go for a while, I run around, living my life today. I stop at the bank after work, waiting in a long line of cars, and when I'm leaving the bank I see a big cloud of what looked like smoke coming out of the back of the van! =8^O I pull over, grab the fire extinguisher and throw the back open, carefully, for fear that flames will come leaping out and burn my face off. What I find is that the engine is now not only covered in oil (what I couldn't get cleaned up from before), but also in, yes, you guessed it, antifreeze. Once some of the steam had cleared (it just condensed on all my windows), I found a small hose was loose. It was a new hose, one that the local dealer had recently replaced. It connects up to the engine next to the power steering pump on one end and to a metal tube over the overflow tank at the other. I reconnected it, started cleaning things up and put the rest of my 50/50 mix that I always carry with me in to the expansion tank. It immediately gets sucked into the engine. The one good thing that happened was that all this happened across the street from a grocery store, so I got some more antifreeze, distilled water, another roll of paper towels, and another bottle of hand cleaner, and topped everything up. Got home without it overheating, so I'm hoping I dodged the bullet on that one. Tomorrow I'll begin the process of letting the system bleed itself.

Bleed itself?!? Yes, that's what I said. Shortly after I got my van, I had some problems wherein the little red blinky light would come on but the engine temperature wouldn't go up. I fixed the problem by being sure that there was always coolant in the overflow tank. Then, when I'd get up the next day, when the system was cold, I'd be sure the expansion tank was topped off and the overflow tank was at the Max level. After a couple of days of doing this, I didn't have to add any more coolant and the blinky light problem went away . . . for three years. This van actually does do a decent job of bleeding itself despite all the horror stories that abound.

So, let's see what joys tomorrow brings . . . Marc Perdue


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