I believe I just avoided a walk home. I removed my fan and
shroud for the winter and noticed a damp place around the
lower radiator hose outlet. Hoping for a bad lower hose, I
drained the coolant and removed the lower hose. When I
wiggled the lower hose to remove it, I thought I could see a
distinct circle of green at the junction of the radiator tank and
the hose outlet! I took the hose off, it looked terrific.
Then I removed the radiator and found the solder joint on the
bottom outlet to have a nearly complete fracture around its
circumference! I buffed the brass surrounding the joint with a
wire wheel in a drill until I had bright metal, found a position
to support the radiator securely, and built up a lot of solder
around the outlet to add mecanical support to the outlet. I
pressure tested it with a motorcycle tube cut and clamped to
the upper and lower outlets(it will only generate 3-5psi), resolder
ed 2 pinholes and reinstalled it. Its running dry so far after
about 400 miles.
I believe that the trucks that have the crossflow radiator like
mine with the short lower hose may be prone to fractures, leaks,
and eventually blowing the outlet out of the bottom of the right
side tank, because there is such a violent engine shake at shutdown, coupled to the lower outlet by a short and relatively
stiff hose that the lower outlet is stressed much more than most.
I may be wrong in my suspicions, but I'm sure going to pull
my radiator shroud loose at the bottom so that I can take a good
look at my lower outlet at least a couple of times a year from now
on! (I had recently noticed my surge tank losing about a pint over
the last 4 weeks, but no green puddles or other signs of coolant
loss)
shroud for the winter and noticed a damp place around the
lower radiator hose outlet. Hoping for a bad lower hose, I
drained the coolant and removed the lower hose. When I
wiggled the lower hose to remove it, I thought I could see a
distinct circle of green at the junction of the radiator tank and
the hose outlet! I took the hose off, it looked terrific.
Then I removed the radiator and found the solder joint on the
bottom outlet to have a nearly complete fracture around its
circumference! I buffed the brass surrounding the joint with a
wire wheel in a drill until I had bright metal, found a position
to support the radiator securely, and built up a lot of solder
around the outlet to add mecanical support to the outlet. I
pressure tested it with a motorcycle tube cut and clamped to
the upper and lower outlets(it will only generate 3-5psi), resolder
ed 2 pinholes and reinstalled it. Its running dry so far after
about 400 miles.
I believe that the trucks that have the crossflow radiator like
mine with the short lower hose may be prone to fractures, leaks,
and eventually blowing the outlet out of the bottom of the right
side tank, because there is such a violent engine shake at shutdown, coupled to the lower outlet by a short and relatively
stiff hose that the lower outlet is stressed much more than most.
I may be wrong in my suspicions, but I'm sure going to pull
my radiator shroud loose at the bottom so that I can take a good
look at my lower outlet at least a couple of times a year from now
on! (I had recently noticed my surge tank losing about a pint over
the last 4 weeks, but no green puddles or other signs of coolant
loss)