Possible cause of split coolant tank?
#1
Drifting
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Ephrata, PA, USA now. Originally from the UK
Posts: 3,075
Likes: 0
Received 22 Likes
on
17 Posts
Possible cause of split coolant tank?
I have read that many times the coolant tank can split requiring a new tank and cap installment. Could this be caused by the pressure relief valve on the top of the tank, not lifting at high temps and the pressure consequently splitting the white plastic tank???. In other words the tank having a faulty relief valve? The reason I ask this question is after completing a spirited drive today (which brought the coolant temp to about 190F) I checked my coolant level without removing the blue top and noticed that the relief valve was then in the open position. Has anyone else noticed this happening to their car? I tried to close it but it went back up again to the open position.
#2
Race Director
No, I never noticed the burp weir being up unexpectedly - even when my 986 got so hot at the track that it dumped a gallon or two of coolant.
#3
Drifting
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Ephrata, PA, USA now. Originally from the UK
Posts: 3,075
Likes: 0
Received 22 Likes
on
17 Posts
I just went into the garage and tried again and it went down and stayed down 20 mins after I arrived home. So my question remains:- if a valve (berp weir) is stuck down for some reason, would that be enough to split a plastic tank? I think just maybe... If so, then its worth us checking that the blurp weir is working correctly. Yes? It would appear that mine is.
#6
Race Director
I was not aware that it lifted on its own. This thread on 986forum suggests that this is not normal:
http://986forum.com/forums/general-d...olant-hot.html
Unless the car is so hot that the coolant is boiling, the system should not leak, and coolant levels should be consistent unless one of the know suspects (radiator cap, water pump shaft bearing, coolant tank) are misbehaving.
http://986forum.com/forums/general-d...olant-hot.html
Unless the car is so hot that the coolant is boiling, the system should not leak, and coolant levels should be consistent unless one of the know suspects (radiator cap, water pump shaft bearing, coolant tank) are misbehaving.
#7
Rennlist Member
The 996 cool tanks are known to need replacing,its one of the known issues with the 996 series. At some point they wear out(crack or split) and start to leak.you will notice this way before it becomes a real problem.mine lasted 76.000 miles. Just part of maintaining the car in my view.
Trending Topics
#8
Three Wheelin'
The 996 cool tanks are known to need replacing,its one of the known issues with the 996 series. At some point they wear out(crack or split) and start to leak.you will notice this way before it becomes a real problem.mine lasted 76.000 miles. Just part of maintaining the car in my view.
Sent from my iPad using Rennlist
#9
The burp weir thingy on mine too is up whenever I drive and get the engine to operating temp. Interesting to know if this is normal. I paid attention to this sometime ago in relationship with burping the coolant system with coolant change. It says to position the metal tab so that the pressure relief valve is in open/up position to burp the system of air. It's a head scratcher for me because mine is always in open position whenever I drive. Btw, I haven't change my coolant yet.
#11
Drifting
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Ephrata, PA, USA now. Originally from the UK
Posts: 3,075
Likes: 0
Received 22 Likes
on
17 Posts
Some are talking 986 and Boxsters. I have the 996 car which has the plain white tank with blue cap which looks nothing like the boxster. At least not the photo I saw on the link. Maybe the pop up valve only lets out pressure and not the coolant. Could be a non return type valve. However, if the cap was not on properly or damaged then the water when at high enough temps expands and would get out that way. Around the side of the cap. If the cap was good and the valve was not lifting because that was bad, then the pressure built in the system had no where to go only to crack the weakest part of the system -; ie the plastic tank. That makes sense to me.
#12
Rennlist Member
The "burp" valve goes up when there is pressure (heat) in the system. This is normal. It does not release pressure, it is not meant to release pressure.
The valve in the removable blue cap (hopefully -04 or newer part suffix) releases the pressure..
The burp valve, when the is bail manually snapped up, is to break the vacuum allowing air bubbles in the system to escape, IE migrate to the tank, when the engine cools off.
As far as tanks failing. Look at what lives below the tank. A HOT muffler that cooks the tank making it brittle. That is why older tanks look yellow. I think that is also one of the reasons Porsche put the engine fan near the tank. When the engine fan comes on it blows cool air into the engine compartment at the tank.
The valve in the removable blue cap (hopefully -04 or newer part suffix) releases the pressure..
The burp valve, when the is bail manually snapped up, is to break the vacuum allowing air bubbles in the system to escape, IE migrate to the tank, when the engine cools off.
As far as tanks failing. Look at what lives below the tank. A HOT muffler that cooks the tank making it brittle. That is why older tanks look yellow. I think that is also one of the reasons Porsche put the engine fan near the tank. When the engine fan comes on it blows cool air into the engine compartment at the tank.
#13
As far as tanks failing. A HOT muffler that cooks the tank making it brittle. That is why older tanks look yellow. I think that is also one of the reasons Porsche put the engine fan near the tank. When the engine fan comes on it blows cool air into the engine compartment at the tank.
Last edited by kromdom; 11-07-2013 at 05:49 AM.
#14
Burning Brakes
Small amounts of coolant, especially on the passenger side of the engine (US) can also be the coolant O-rings in the oil cooler. Also common failure items, and potentially worse than a leaking coolant tank.
#15
A German thing?
FWIW, coolant tanks are also a common problem, the leaks that is, with BMWs and Mercedes. Given my experiences with both brands and my 996, I think I've replaced four tanks in the past 6-7 years. Geez...what's so hard about manu'ing a long life plastic tank?
relinuca
relinuca