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Tips for dealing with overheating or total oil loss. 850

There have been a rash of postings over the past few months telling tales of woe relating to overheating and/or running a Volvo with no oil.

The basic rule of thumb is . . .

If one of the idiot lights comes on relating to temperature, or oil, or if the temperature gauge starts climbing or is already there, or if you see smoke curling around the seams of your hood . . .

STOP IMMEDIATELY AND SHUT THE CAR OFF.

Call a tow truck and get the problem resolved. PERIOD.

I can't believe, in these threads, how many of these people have kind-of learned to live with their car overheating. Every foot you drive with a car in this condition is a fatal insult to the engine.

I don't care if you are just a block away from your driveway. Don't drive the car if it is overheating or the oil idiot light is on. If you want to keep your car, there can be no compromise on this statement.

Whenever I purchase a used car, one of the main questions I ask is, has the car ever overheated, or been run dry. I ask the question in a non-judgemental way so that the person is not afraid to reveal the issue. But if they respond that it had, I will not buy that car.

99% of cars that have these kind of issues, even once, are doomed to an early-life failure.

Overheating and oil failure is to cars what smoking three packs a day is to people. Yeah, there's that one person in West Virginia who has smoked three packs a day and he's currently 98 years old, but most people will die an early death because of that habit. Same thing with overheating and oil failure--some cars will survive this kind of failure to a ripe old age, but 99% will suffer terribly.

My car friends and I used to joke, for cars that only had idiot lights, that the temperature light and the oil light, when they came on, were saying: idiot, you toasted your engine.

So, at the very first sign of any temperature or oil problem, stop the car immediately and don't drive the car until the problem is resolved.








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    Tips for dealing with overheating or total oil loss. 850

    Ken and Gwen,

    You hit the nail on the head. Gwen, I keep that 13mm wrench for those pesky wiper arms right in the door pocket this winter, lol.
    Oil and/or water problems will end the life of even the best made vechiles.

    Mitch








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    Tips for dealing with overheating or total oil loss. 850

    Great Advice.

    Even as great of a car as the 850's are, I would still carry a few quarts of oil in the trunk and at least one 50/50 gallon of coolant....I also carry a 10mm wrench for the battery and a 13mm wrench for the nut that keeps the wiper blade arms on and extra bulbs......

    Oil badly degrades the rubber on cooling hoses......anyone with a chronic oil leak, should check the lower hose for swelling....

    If I had to write an extended service for the 850's it would be: (in addition to the normal 60,000mi stuff)

    150,000 new timing belt, water pump, and pulleys....seals in the timing belt area.

    175,000 miles......new fuel pump, mass air meter, and cam position sensor

    200,000 new drivers side seals (rear main), new motor mounts (all 3), complete EGR service

    250,000 miles.....new starter

    At least this way, you could save for the repairs and not be caught off guard..

    you could also keep the old parts for testing possible failures...








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      Tips for dealing with overheating or total oil loss. 850

      Unfortunately, the gauges aren't much more helpful than an idiot light as in the case of the temp gauge, electronic compensation keeps the needle in the 'safe zone' until well after damage has been done (an 'idiot gauge'?). Because of that, I check fluid levels weekly, and insist that everybody else in my family do the same.

      I agree that overheating and under-oiling are the two most severe hazards which can befall an engine.







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