Just a heads up. My original waterpump gave up the ghost catastrophically at 270K miles. The reason I am posting this is that there was no warning like a small leak at the seal to allert me that things were needing attention. If your truck is high milage with original water pump you should just change it. It is the easiest water pump change imaginable. Remove two bolts and out she comes. Pop the new one in place and torque two bolts.
I just happened to have checked the fluids one morning (don't do this very often) and then drove about 3 miles to my first stop of the day. Huge puddle of coolant under my truck formed fairly quickly where I stopped. So much, I just knew I had a radiator failure since hoses had recently been changed. It was the water pump. The pump pulley had about one inch of up and down play when i removed the belt and pieces of metal were laying on the ledge just below the pump. One of them looked like a roller out of a roller bearing. I don't know if that thing has roller bearings or not. The housing was too hollowed out to learn anything. When I poured water in so I could drive home it just ran out the pump as quickly as I poured it in.
If that had happened some day when I headed out with my travel trailer I would have been on the interstat a few mjiles down the road with a badly overheated engine unless you get ample steam warning before it destroys itself. I doubt I would have noticed the guage with the water loss so fast.
I would be interested in hearing what the track record of these engines is with sudden water loss.
I just happened to have checked the fluids one morning (don't do this very often) and then drove about 3 miles to my first stop of the day. Huge puddle of coolant under my truck formed fairly quickly where I stopped. So much, I just knew I had a radiator failure since hoses had recently been changed. It was the water pump. The pump pulley had about one inch of up and down play when i removed the belt and pieces of metal were laying on the ledge just below the pump. One of them looked like a roller out of a roller bearing. I don't know if that thing has roller bearings or not. The housing was too hollowed out to learn anything. When I poured water in so I could drive home it just ran out the pump as quickly as I poured it in.
If that had happened some day when I headed out with my travel trailer I would have been on the interstat a few mjiles down the road with a badly overheated engine unless you get ample steam warning before it destroys itself. I doubt I would have noticed the guage with the water loss so fast.
I would be interested in hearing what the track record of these engines is with sudden water loss.