I caught the tail end of a thread on 9# rad caps a while back. I had the
shop drop my rad last year. It had been weeping in the bottom corner since I
got it 7 years ago. I had driven it like that for over 25,000 miles. It
never leaked much just enough to mess up the asphalt drive way with a couple
of spots. I told the shop to put in new cores if there was any doubt but
they just resoldered it saying it was solid. I believe It was leaking on the
seam where it joins the reservoir.
It seems to me that the rad material is as strong or stronger than the new
rads they are putting into the cars today so I don't follow why we can not
operate them at 18 psi. It doesn't leak now under that pressure.
It seems to me that the extra pressure will give more boil over protection.
What is the thinking on the con side of this guys? Maybe I should spend the
big bucks on a new cap if one could find a nine pounder these days
TIA
Wayne
shop drop my rad last year. It had been weeping in the bottom corner since I
got it 7 years ago. I had driven it like that for over 25,000 miles. It
never leaked much just enough to mess up the asphalt drive way with a couple
of spots. I told the shop to put in new cores if there was any doubt but
they just resoldered it saying it was solid. I believe It was leaking on the
seam where it joins the reservoir.
It seems to me that the rad material is as strong or stronger than the new
rads they are putting into the cars today so I don't follow why we can not
operate them at 18 psi. It doesn't leak now under that pressure.
It seems to me that the extra pressure will give more boil over protection.
What is the thinking on the con side of this guys? Maybe I should spend the
big bucks on a new cap if one could find a nine pounder these days
TIA
Wayne