phantomjock
Senior Member
This not an exciting "MOD," but something that ought to be of some interest.
Seems everyone is anxious when buying a used ClassB to get all the maintenance records. Good plan, even for the purchase of any used vehicle. We did so when we bougfht ours too.
I'll admit, mine was a cursory look when we purchased, but it was easy to see the previous owners used service facilities, rather than DIY. I'm keeping a log of my maintenance, and assume many of you are as well. But that is not the prupose of this thread.
I recently got an (engine) overheat. Not too drastic, but enough to cause concern. Now I'm going through the system. Radiator pressure checked good and held for over 3 hours before I terminated the test.
Next I'll check for combusion gasses in the coolant (indicates a head gasket fail). Not suspecting such as we get no white smoke at the tail pipe, but a caution worthy of noting.
Then I plan to do a complete flush of the system. As I am getting ready, I took a second moment to go through the vehicle records. To my surprise, there is no indication a coolant flush has ever been accomplished - the vehicle is 16 years old! Given the Chevy Owner's Manual recommendations, it should happen every 150,000 miles (now just at 92K) - OR every 5 Years, WHICHEVER occurrs FIRST. So, there should be record of 3, or at least 2. So, I think its time to flush the system.
But, because I can overthink things, I recall waterpumps are good for about 100K. Having searched the forum, all but one thread is about the household waterpump - not the engine. I am reaching a cost/benefit decision point. I almost seems I should just go ahead and replace the waterpump as PM and not risk tossing a complete round of coolant. [NOTE: A waterpump for the Chevy 6.0L runs around the same price as a complete flush of coolant.]
Any experience here? Anyone replaced an engine waterpump? It's not a hard task, I am just interested at about what point you might have done so, 100K, 150K, never? If you did replace, what pump did you use? Also if you are "generaly" following the OEM guidelines for coolant flush?
Thanks in Advance!
Cheers - Jim
Seems everyone is anxious when buying a used ClassB to get all the maintenance records. Good plan, even for the purchase of any used vehicle. We did so when we bougfht ours too.
I'll admit, mine was a cursory look when we purchased, but it was easy to see the previous owners used service facilities, rather than DIY. I'm keeping a log of my maintenance, and assume many of you are as well. But that is not the prupose of this thread.
I recently got an (engine) overheat. Not too drastic, but enough to cause concern. Now I'm going through the system. Radiator pressure checked good and held for over 3 hours before I terminated the test.
Next I'll check for combusion gasses in the coolant (indicates a head gasket fail). Not suspecting such as we get no white smoke at the tail pipe, but a caution worthy of noting.
Then I plan to do a complete flush of the system. As I am getting ready, I took a second moment to go through the vehicle records. To my surprise, there is no indication a coolant flush has ever been accomplished - the vehicle is 16 years old! Given the Chevy Owner's Manual recommendations, it should happen every 150,000 miles (now just at 92K) - OR every 5 Years, WHICHEVER occurrs FIRST. So, there should be record of 3, or at least 2. So, I think its time to flush the system.
But, because I can overthink things, I recall waterpumps are good for about 100K. Having searched the forum, all but one thread is about the household waterpump - not the engine. I am reaching a cost/benefit decision point. I almost seems I should just go ahead and replace the waterpump as PM and not risk tossing a complete round of coolant. [NOTE: A waterpump for the Chevy 6.0L runs around the same price as a complete flush of coolant.]
Any experience here? Anyone replaced an engine waterpump? It's not a hard task, I am just interested at about what point you might have done so, 100K, 150K, never? If you did replace, what pump did you use? Also if you are "generaly" following the OEM guidelines for coolant flush?
Thanks in Advance!
Cheers - Jim