As above, but first check you don't have a cylinder head gasket leak. That will pressurise the cooling system and rip it apart. Get a mechanic to test the radiator water for combustion gases.
Steve
As above, but first check you don't have a cylinder head gasket leak. That will pressurise the cooling system and rip it apart. Get a mechanic to test the radiator water for combustion gases.
Steve
"I am a licenced motorcycle instructor, I agree with dangerousbastard, no point in repeating what he said."
"read what Steve says. He's right."
"What Steve said pretty much summed it up."
"I did axactly as you said and it worked...!!"
"Wow, Great advise there DB."
WTB: Hyosung bikes or going or not.
I did many years with Toyota and this is my take on it.
Your alternator died and was rebuilt, right? I would guess that the bearings in your water pump have done many thousands of k's and when the alternator was refitted the multi-v belt was over-tightened. (This is more common than you think.) The extra tesnion pulling the water pump bearing off-centre has finished off the bearing and/or seal in the water pump. Coolant has oozed from the tell-tale hole (the 3mm hole you describe, which is indeed put there by the factory) and the engine has overheated. The steam in the cooling system has over-pressurised the system and forced remaining coolant from any weak point.
It's possible it's puckerood thanks to the overheating but it depends entirely on how seriously it has overheated. Often it looks worse than it is, often with coolant hitting a hot exhaust, steaming away furiously and stinking the place up. Is there any sign of water/condensation in the oil? (On the underside of the oil filler cap or on the dipstick?) If so, I would be inclined to drain the oil and look for more water/coolant. If there is water in the oil you've probably got a mare, if not I'd be inclined to whack a water pump on it, pressure test the cooling system and drive on.
Something you can do to check the head gasket's integrity is to perform a cylinder leak-down test, you might want to talk to your spanner man if you don't know what that is and he should have the required nouse and equipment.
Your two biggest problems would be a blown head gasket or even a split head (the latter is rare on those motors) but at best a new water pump and the aforementioned cooling system pressure test should see you back on the road.
Any more questions about Toyotas don't hesitate to PM me.
Good luck.
I'll concur with Peasea, if you got one with the 3s-ge engine then I have seen a failure like this before first hand. Replaced faulty alternator on an engine that had done 170,000ks 3 weeks later major looking blow out of coolant system. Turns out to be what Peasea described, pump had failed, fail safes went and over pressurised. New water pump, refitted new hoses cap etc and tested. Did an oil change and checked no obvious signs, drove the car for another 60,000 before selling to some young fella few years back.
Yep. 3sg-e. An it sounds exactly like what you're describing. That was the one time I let someone else do anything on the car. The one last time. Fuckwits. ANyway, I've got the factory workshop manual, so I've got some pointers. Cambelt was due anyway, and I guess I can just eat dirt for the next three weeks. Fuck.
Thanks again, I'll report on findings when I'm done in the evening.
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
Well, it turns out that the water pump is not belt driven. So that's not what caused it.
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
Ok, not so positive. It isn't driven directlly off the engine. It's Driven by the timing belt. That's what the workshop manual says. And that's why the timing belt has to come off to remove the water pump. Fuck.
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
If you're talking about the upper engine mount then don't forget to put a jack (with a block of wood on it) under the sump. Usually there are nuts or bolts that are only accessable from underneath with a long extension. From memory there might be one large bolt that runs through the mount but the actual mount needs to be removed also. Take the top cam belt cover off (some bolts are a bit tight to access, quarter-drive socket set is handy here) and you'll probably see what I'm on about.
http://mr2.com/ARTICLE/TimingBeltSW20.html
Oops... guess the turbo/intercooler parts aren't for you
http://www.celicagt.nl/Docs/st202_rm396e.pdf
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