Well as some of you may know we just got N/A Madness running again. The only way to bleed the coolant on an ld9 is to take the over flow cap off and let the air bubbles come out as we run it and keep filling as the coolant level goes down correct. or is there another method? better way or some thing to get all the air out?
The cooling system was completely dry after the rebuild.
[In theory, any possible air that may be trapped in these systems will rise to the highest point]
Just to add to the sound advice you have so far, I read somewhere that a shop owner always bleeds the air out with the car on ramps at the front, this really makes the recovery tank the highest point.
I tried it on my '93 after a h/gasket change and only needed that one bleed.
Alont
alont wrote:[In theory, any possible air that may be trapped in these systems will rise to the highest point]
Just to add to the sound advice you have so far, I read somewhere that a shop owner always bleeds the air out with the car on ramps at the front, this really makes the recovery tank the highest point.
I tried it on my '93 after a h/gasket change and only needed that one bleed.
Alont
Wouldn't that put the rad higher than the tank?
On my cars and liquid cooled ATV's I've always just driven it a little bit then add to the overflow tank to the full mark. Keep doing this until the radiator quits sucking from the overflow tank.
Rob
Sold 2/2/05
I have never had a problem with air pockets on a J. I always start them with the cap off and let the thermostat open and fill some ore. At that time I would put the cap on. After letting the car cool check the coolant level again.
FU Tuning