Hi, I've got a bit of an enigma here that I need some advice on, and there's a bit of backstory to it that may help with any diagnosis. I've been searching for weeks and haven't found anyone experiencing similar problems. Here goes.
I bought a 98 firebird with 73k on the clock for around $1700 back in January. Apart from a broken headlight motor gear, it was in really good shape, but the ownership history was sparse at best, and it seemed like it had been sitting for quite a while. In May, it started to spring a minor oil and coolant leak. I've since replaced the upper and lower intake manifold gaskets (really every gasket I could find apart from the head gaskets and exhaust manifold gaskets), and of course those have been sealed properly and torqued to specifications. I also replaced the infamous coolant elbows.
I got the car up and running after 6 months (I'm in college, give me a break), but after running for five minutes or so, some steam started rising from underneath the exhaust manifold on the passenger side. I figured it could have been some PB blaster burning off from under the heat shields, since at one point I planned on removing the exhaust manifolds to replace the head gaskets, but ultimately never went further than applying lots of PB to the passenger side and a little bit of it to the driver's side. It also developed a small coolant leak from the front of the engine, and I ended up replacing the water pump (which was actually fine, if a bit old; the gasket was again the issue) along with the coolant temperature sensor.
I thought the steam could have been related to air in the coolant, but after several runs I am certain that I've fully bled the coolant system and there should be no air pockets left, but the problem persists.
I decided to try idling the car for as long as possible to see if either it was some condensation that needed to fully evaporate or some sort of crud burning off. After 20 minutes or so, there was less steam coming from under the exhaust manifold on the passenger side, which was good news, but additional steam started coming from under the exhaust manifold on the driver's side. I tried driving the car around the parking lot, and the temperature slowly rose from the regular 210 to close to 235, which isn't great.
The strange thing is that there is NO steam coming from the exhaust pipes, and no external leak. No liquid is pooling anywhere, nothing is visibly getting wet. Furthermore, I'm unaware of any connections to the coolant system near the back of the engine. I THINK I can hear a slight sputtering sound from the area of the back of the passenger side valve rocker cover, something akin to water touching a hot metal surface and instantly evaporating, but with the sound of both the engine and the serpentine belt, it's hard to say for sure that I'm hearing a unique sound.
I won't be able to get back to the car for a short while to jack it up and take a look underneath, so I'm just looking for more informed ideas of what could be causing the issue.
A quick recap of important factoids:
- car was probably left sitting for a long time with dexcool in it, which has eaten just about every plastic gasket. The radiator seems to have survived.
- developed a coolant and oil leak from the lower intake manifold gaskets
- intake manifold gaskets and coolant hose elbows (among other things) were replaced
- coolant has been refilled and system has been burped, oil has also been refilled
- after the system builds up some heat and pressure, steam starts rising from under the exhaust manifolds (and it is definitely steam, not smoke), which is a new issue entirely.
- no error codes whatsoever
Anyone have any idea what's going on here?
Head gaskets? (Shouldn't be a problem now since they weren't the issue before, I never touched the head bolts, also no steam/white smoke from tailpipe)
Freeze plugs? Knock sensor? Something else entirely?
Is it worth running the car some more to see if it burns off or stops on its own? Should I get a professional coolant acid flush to clear out any potential blockages that could be causing this? Maybe a pressure test? Any advice is appreciated.
I bought a 98 firebird with 73k on the clock for around $1700 back in January. Apart from a broken headlight motor gear, it was in really good shape, but the ownership history was sparse at best, and it seemed like it had been sitting for quite a while. In May, it started to spring a minor oil and coolant leak. I've since replaced the upper and lower intake manifold gaskets (really every gasket I could find apart from the head gaskets and exhaust manifold gaskets), and of course those have been sealed properly and torqued to specifications. I also replaced the infamous coolant elbows.
I got the car up and running after 6 months (I'm in college, give me a break), but after running for five minutes or so, some steam started rising from underneath the exhaust manifold on the passenger side. I figured it could have been some PB blaster burning off from under the heat shields, since at one point I planned on removing the exhaust manifolds to replace the head gaskets, but ultimately never went further than applying lots of PB to the passenger side and a little bit of it to the driver's side. It also developed a small coolant leak from the front of the engine, and I ended up replacing the water pump (which was actually fine, if a bit old; the gasket was again the issue) along with the coolant temperature sensor.
I thought the steam could have been related to air in the coolant, but after several runs I am certain that I've fully bled the coolant system and there should be no air pockets left, but the problem persists.
I decided to try idling the car for as long as possible to see if either it was some condensation that needed to fully evaporate or some sort of crud burning off. After 20 minutes or so, there was less steam coming from under the exhaust manifold on the passenger side, which was good news, but additional steam started coming from under the exhaust manifold on the driver's side. I tried driving the car around the parking lot, and the temperature slowly rose from the regular 210 to close to 235, which isn't great.
The strange thing is that there is NO steam coming from the exhaust pipes, and no external leak. No liquid is pooling anywhere, nothing is visibly getting wet. Furthermore, I'm unaware of any connections to the coolant system near the back of the engine. I THINK I can hear a slight sputtering sound from the area of the back of the passenger side valve rocker cover, something akin to water touching a hot metal surface and instantly evaporating, but with the sound of both the engine and the serpentine belt, it's hard to say for sure that I'm hearing a unique sound.
I won't be able to get back to the car for a short while to jack it up and take a look underneath, so I'm just looking for more informed ideas of what could be causing the issue.
A quick recap of important factoids:
- car was probably left sitting for a long time with dexcool in it, which has eaten just about every plastic gasket. The radiator seems to have survived.
- developed a coolant and oil leak from the lower intake manifold gaskets
- intake manifold gaskets and coolant hose elbows (among other things) were replaced
- coolant has been refilled and system has been burped, oil has also been refilled
- after the system builds up some heat and pressure, steam starts rising from under the exhaust manifolds (and it is definitely steam, not smoke), which is a new issue entirely.
- no error codes whatsoever
Anyone have any idea what's going on here?
Head gaskets? (Shouldn't be a problem now since they weren't the issue before, I never touched the head bolts, also no steam/white smoke from tailpipe)
Freeze plugs? Knock sensor? Something else entirely?
Is it worth running the car some more to see if it burns off or stops on its own? Should I get a professional coolant acid flush to clear out any potential blockages that could be causing this? Maybe a pressure test? Any advice is appreciated.
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