tireman
Dedicated LVC Member
Found the problem and fixed it. Yes it was the DCCV.
The DCCV is located at the lowest point in the coolant system so all the metal flakes and gunk flows to the DCCV. The coils create an magnetic field and attract the metal flakes which jamb the piston and cylinder. Now, I removed the DCCV and found the piston gummed up, so I flushed the coolant system, clean and polished the DCCV piston and piston cylinder, used gum out and simple green to clean up the valve openings and springs, lubricated with wd-40, reinstalled, runs like a charm. Heat!
This is my second DCCV in the car, 1st one jambed at 85k, the second at 30k. As the car ages, more junk gets in the coolant and the DCCV jambs quicker i believe. If both solenoids check out with good readings 10-23 Ohms, then most likely it is a mechanical or Hydraulic solenoid failure. Solenoids themselves rarely fail. It is much more likely a mechanical failure due to contamination.
PM me if you would like an updated DCCV breakdown report.
The DCCV is located at the lowest point in the coolant system so all the metal flakes and gunk flows to the DCCV. The coils create an magnetic field and attract the metal flakes which jamb the piston and cylinder. Now, I removed the DCCV and found the piston gummed up, so I flushed the coolant system, clean and polished the DCCV piston and piston cylinder, used gum out and simple green to clean up the valve openings and springs, lubricated with wd-40, reinstalled, runs like a charm. Heat!
This is my second DCCV in the car, 1st one jambed at 85k, the second at 30k. As the car ages, more junk gets in the coolant and the DCCV jambs quicker i believe. If both solenoids check out with good readings 10-23 Ohms, then most likely it is a mechanical or Hydraulic solenoid failure. Solenoids themselves rarely fail. It is much more likely a mechanical failure due to contamination.
PM me if you would like an updated DCCV breakdown report.