rgorke
Dedicated LVC Member
I replaced my whole system last year (May 2018) with genuine Motorcraft parts. My '04 V8 with 247k miles is not overheating, however when sitting in LA traffic (ambient temp is upper 90s) the temp will rise to the mid 220s (227-228). When up to freeway speed the temp comes down to 210 ish and rolling down a hill I am under 200.
I recently noticed that there is the tell-tale signs of dried coolant around the base of the 9N499 neck pipe and when I took the spawn to school this morning, that dried coolant was damp. So, what to do? What to do? Not sure if the 9N499 is the culprit or whether it is seeping down from another location.
One issue is that I managed to "strip" the mounting nuts that hold the thermostat onto the 8549A Cross over pipe. By "strip" I mean the bolt turns the nut that is supposed to be solidly secured in the crossover pipe. I had epoxied them in but I am seeing that it didn't hold. I am thinking this may be the compromising issue that the thermostat housing isn't torqued properly.
Options?
1) confirm where the leak is seems to be of paramount importance but is usually difficult with these things. then...
2) re-epoxy nuts in crossover OR get longer bolts for the thermostat mounting and use a nut on the back end of the crossover to torque properly.
3) Replace both parts (9N499 and crossover) ...but with only 18 months that hurts but isn't too expensive. However, if one or both have a micro crack due to the 10 thumbed mechanic, this may be the wise choice.
Thoughts? Again, not "technically" overheating but not functioning at 100%.
I recently noticed that there is the tell-tale signs of dried coolant around the base of the 9N499 neck pipe and when I took the spawn to school this morning, that dried coolant was damp. So, what to do? What to do? Not sure if the 9N499 is the culprit or whether it is seeping down from another location.
One issue is that I managed to "strip" the mounting nuts that hold the thermostat onto the 8549A Cross over pipe. By "strip" I mean the bolt turns the nut that is supposed to be solidly secured in the crossover pipe. I had epoxied them in but I am seeing that it didn't hold. I am thinking this may be the compromising issue that the thermostat housing isn't torqued properly.
Options?
1) confirm where the leak is seems to be of paramount importance but is usually difficult with these things. then...
2) re-epoxy nuts in crossover OR get longer bolts for the thermostat mounting and use a nut on the back end of the crossover to torque properly.
3) Replace both parts (9N499 and crossover) ...but with only 18 months that hurts but isn't too expensive. However, if one or both have a micro crack due to the 10 thumbed mechanic, this may be the wise choice.
Thoughts? Again, not "technically" overheating but not functioning at 100%.