Jonny
07-08-2025, 01:35 PM
Background....
Rough running for about 10 seconds upon start-up.
Coolant dripping out of exhaust system overnight.
Obviously coolant getting into cylinder(s) somehow.
Engine out, head off, coolant sitting in cylinder #2. Everything else about the engine looked great to me.
Head gasket and head gasket seal surfaces looked great.
After borrowing a 20x magnifying loupe I saw what might have been a tiny crack between the rearward pair of intake/exhaust valves.
Since I'm a first timer deep into an engine I took the head to a shop (with experts, right?) and asked them to confirm coolant system leak (or not) with pressure test, so that I knew with certainty which component to blame.
They called a few days later and said job was done, but when I went to pick it up all they had done was inspect for cracks, not confirm with pressure test.
They found one crack on cylinder 2, and three cracks on cylinder 3. Cylinder 3 was not leaking, even though there were visible cracks, so simply finding cracks obviously did not confirm leaks. The problem might still be with the head gasket or the engine block.
Instead of taking a deep breath and saying "you didn't do what I asked you to do. Would you please pressure test the head to confirm any leaks" I stomped out of there with the thought "if you want something done right why do you always have to do it yourself?"
So here we are with the DIY pressure test thread. TBC...
Rough running for about 10 seconds upon start-up.
Coolant dripping out of exhaust system overnight.
Obviously coolant getting into cylinder(s) somehow.
Engine out, head off, coolant sitting in cylinder #2. Everything else about the engine looked great to me.
Head gasket and head gasket seal surfaces looked great.
After borrowing a 20x magnifying loupe I saw what might have been a tiny crack between the rearward pair of intake/exhaust valves.
Since I'm a first timer deep into an engine I took the head to a shop (with experts, right?) and asked them to confirm coolant system leak (or not) with pressure test, so that I knew with certainty which component to blame.
They called a few days later and said job was done, but when I went to pick it up all they had done was inspect for cracks, not confirm with pressure test.
They found one crack on cylinder 2, and three cracks on cylinder 3. Cylinder 3 was not leaking, even though there were visible cracks, so simply finding cracks obviously did not confirm leaks. The problem might still be with the head gasket or the engine block.
Instead of taking a deep breath and saying "you didn't do what I asked you to do. Would you please pressure test the head to confirm any leaks" I stomped out of there with the thought "if you want something done right why do you always have to do it yourself?"
So here we are with the DIY pressure test thread. TBC...