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    Is your car overheating? Read this.

    Source: www.carsurvey.org

    Car: 1990 CV

    Comments:

    7th Mar 2005, 13:48

    I finally did take the car into a mechanic. He said that the idle was way off. He corrected it. The check engine light stopped coming on after that. (knock on wood) We replace the thermostat and the radiator cap. It is still overheating at times. We're going to replace the water pump. It also needs a new valve gasket and oil pan gasket.

    11th Jul 2010, 18:28

    In regards to the heating problem mentioned in the comment from 7th Mar 2005, 13:48, I've had my '90 Crown Vic since May of '94. It was my former company car and I bought it from my employer when it reached the mileage limit where the company put its cars out to pasture.

    I was the second person the car was assigned to, and from the moment it was assigned to me, I noticed it had a run hot problem, especially with the air on and pulling a grade. It would never get out of the normal range, but would get to the temperature where the A/C compressor would kick out. I chased that problem across 30k miles, replacing water pumps, thermostats, a radiator and fan clutch before I finally found out what it was. I even installed the police/taxi air dam option (a Ford part) across the front of the super structure under the front bumper. It helped quite a bit, but didn't solve the problem.

    What it turned out to be was the coolant mixture was too strong on the ethylene glycol mixture. Apparently, Ford had a problem with those era Crown Vics & Merc Gran Marquis if they didn't run a 50/50 mixture in the cooling system. In doing some research, apparently Ford issued a service bulletin to their dealers back when the cars were new outlining the problem on how to fix it. When I found that out, I took a hydrometer reading on the coolant in the radiator and it was almost straight coolant, installed by the last place that serviced the cooling system and not a Ford dealer.

    I looked up the cooling system capacity, which is 14 quarts total, drained out the radiator, which took 1 gallon & one quart. That left 9 quarts left in the engine block and heater core, so I filled up the radiator with straight water, fired the engine up and let it run until the thermostat opened and mixed the water and remaining coolant and then took another hydrometer reading, which showed the protection level right where it should be both for hot and cold. So seeing this, I capped the radiator and drove the car under the same conditions and up the same grades where the problem had been happening and the problem was gone!

    So you might look into that. It worked in my case.
    '79 Continental Town Car
    '90 Crown Victoria LTD
    '94 Crown Victoria

    #2
    That is cool information right there.
    "Shakedown"- 1991 Grand Marquis GS Dual exhaust, Magnaflow xl turbos, Rear anti sway bar, Outlaw 1 wheels, 43k miles
    1985 GMC 1500

    Comment


      #3
      Ethelyne glycol is a fairly shitty heat transfer fluid. The water is a neccesity for proper heat transfer. Actually straight water cools better, but it rusts everything up really badly. The antifreeze is sort of required for its anticorrosive properties as well as the whole "don't bust the block open" thing. If you don't live where it gets below freezing, you can run like 25% antifreeze and you're good to go. Antifreeze also does have some boilover protection, but its not a huge amount.
      86 Lincoln Town Car (Galactica).
      5.0 HO, CompCams XE258,Scorpion 1.72 roller rockers, 3.55 K code rear, tow package, BHPerformance ported E7 heads, Tmoss Explorer intake, 65mm throttle body, Hedman 1 5/8" headers, 2.5" dual exhaust, ASP underdrive pulley

      91 Lincoln Mark VII LSC grandpa spec white and cranberry

      1984 Lincoln Continental TurboDiesel - rolls coal

      Originally posted by phayzer5
      I drive a Lincoln. I can't be bothered to shift like the peasants and rabble rousers

      Comment


        #4
        If you can, use distilled water. It doesn't have the harsh corrosive minerals that the water from the sink or hose would have.

        Comment


          #5
          I still want a nice air damn for the front.
          ~David~

          My 1987 Crown Victoria Coupe: The Brown Blob
          My 2004 Mercedes Benz E320:The Benz

          Originally posted by ootdega
          My life is a long series of "nevermind" and "I guess not."

          Originally posted by DerekTheGreat
          But, that's just coming from me, this site's biggest pessimist. Best of luck

          Originally posted by gadget73
          my car starts and it has AC. Yours doesn't start and it has no AC. Seems obvious to me.




          Comment


            #6
            You might also check to see if you have dead badgers plugging up the area in front of the radiator, as that also causes overheating.

            Comment


              #7
              Honey badgers or American badgers?
              sigpic


              - 1990 Ford LTD Crown Victoria P72 - the street boat - 5.0 liter EFI - Ported HO intake/TB, 90 TC shroud/overflow, Aero airbox/zip tube, Cobra camshaft, 19lb injectors, dual exhaust w/ Magnaflows, Cat/Smog & AC delete, 3G alternator, MOOG chassis parts & KYB cop shocks, 215/70r/15s on 95-97 Merc rims

              - 2007 Ford Escape XLT - soccer mom lifted station wagon - 3.0 Duratec, auto, rear converter delete w/ Magnaflow dual exhaust

              - 2008 Mercury Grand Marquis Ultimate Edition - Daily driver - 4.6 2 valve Mod motor, 4R75E, 2.73s. Bone stock

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by 1990LTD View Post
                Honey badgers or American badgers?
                American.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Is that a true story (about the badger)? If so, that is hilarious

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by BerniniCaCO3 View Post
                    Is that a true story (about the badger)? If so, that is hilarious
                    No.

                    Comment

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