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RE: loosing cooling fluid / electrical fuel pump

To: "'Louis & Laila'" <bwana@c2i2.com>, <JACranwell@aol.com>,
Subject: RE: loosing cooling fluid / electrical fuel pump
From: "Thomas Wiencek" <wiencek@anl.gov>
Date: Fri, 13 Sep 2002 15:51:17 -0500
Is there any particular cylinder (like #3) that usually goes bad?

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-alpines@autox.team.net [mailto:owner-alpines@autox.team.net]
On Behalf Of Louis & Laila
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 2:26 AM
To: JACranwell@aol.com; patrickh@datacomm.ch; alpines@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: loosing cooling fluid / electrical fuel pump

I agree with Julian, chances are the head gasket and head is corroded
right
there were the water goes within an 1/8 inch of the cylinder, and you
are
losing it through the tailpipe. This usually presents itself as a white
cloud behind the car as you downshift. You can also find it by the loss
of
compression. Another equally painful possibility, is that your freeze
plug
in the back of the engine is leaking. Water drains through it, and into
the
bell housing area. To replace this one, you have to pull the engine or
trans, not a pleasant possibility. Lou
----- Original Message -----
From: <JACranwell@aol.com>
To: <patrickh@datacomm.ch>; <alpines@autox.team.net>
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 7:41 AM
Subject: Re: loosing cooling fluid / electrical fuel pump


> 1. Loss of cooling fluid. If all other evidence is no leakage, then
your
head
> gasket is suspect. Fluid from the cooling jackets, into the combustion
> chamber, then out the exaust.
>
> 2. I would place it on the inner wing, to the outside of the ignition
coil.
> The supply tubing is then close enough. I take it that you are
proposing
the
> electric pump as a 'Disaster Recovery' option, in the event that the
> mechanical bugger gives up the ghost. If so, why not just carry a
spare
mech.
> unit in the boot (trunk).
>
> Julian.

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