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Radiator Story 200

I removed the radiator and shroud as part of the procedure to replace the timing belt tensioner in my daughter's '83 (149k mi). This just takes a few minutes and makes timing belt/water pump etc. work a lot easier. I used a flashlight to peer into the upper and lower hose spigots and see a few of the tubes...they looked pretty well scaled up with those whitish powdery deposits. Took it to a rad shop for a boil-out, but first they did a flow test. This consisted of standing the rad upright in its normal position and filling with a high-flow hose through its bottom spigot until it comes out the top. Then pull the hose away and see how fast it empties. Looked pretty good to me but the rad-man said it was at least 50% plugged...the stream should spurt initially about 2ft horizontally and run out quickly, not slowly come to a trickle like mine.

I was a little disappointed, as I've had this car since new, and always flushed and renewed the coolant (50/50) every two yrs. But the guy said that's why it was still in reasonable shape after 20 yrs, he doesn't often see them this old in decent shape. They removed one tank, rodded out the tubes and boiled it, then reassembled and repainted for $85. They also repaired two pinhole leaks. I hadn't seen any signs of overheating, but the guy said it was a rather big rad for a 2.3liter engine, and could probably function OK even at half-capacity, as long as outside air wasn't too hot.

I'm looking at the experience as preventive maintenance, and a saving of $100 or so over a replacement. So I'll throw out the suggestion that you look in their when you have the chance and see if yours needs similar work. Summer's coming.
--
Bob (81-244GL B21F, 83-244DL B23F, 94-940Sedan B230F)








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    Radiator Story 200

    Most of those deposits would've have been the minerals in the water. Next time, used distilled - no minerals, no deposits.

    -- Kane
    --
    Blossom II - '91 745Ti/M46 ... Bubbles - '74 144GL/BW35 ... Buttercup - '86 245GL/AW70 ... The Wayback Machine - '64 P220/M40








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    Radiator Story 200

    sounds like a sales pitch to me... How has the temp gauge been all these years... has it been running in normal temp range?

    I remember a fill up at a gas station in williams az, the pump jockey filled the tank, checked the tires and oil for me and called me out to show me some oil drops on the ground, below my rear shock absorber, "looks like the shock is bad"...
    he suggested i replace the shock immeadiatly.
    i suggested he stop squirting oil on the ground below my shock absorber


    Whenever you get a message, consider the messengers motives

    ohnovolvo
    84 240 diesel
    86 240 gasser








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      Radiator Story 200

      I've usually used household tapwater and the car spent its first 16 yrs in a place where the water was pretty good (not much TDS or hardness). The last 4 years I've used softened water which is what we put through our oilfield steam generators. Following a thread here on the softwater v. distilled topic, I got (and reprinted here) info from Prestone that distilled water was preferable, so I'm now using that.

      Yeah - I've replaced water pump and t'stat once and hoses 2 or 3 times.

      As for sales pitch...nah - good ol' boy small town shop and the guy reran the demo after he rodded out my rad and the flow improvement was substantial. His test just uses the gravity head of the water in the rad so there's no way he can 'rig' it. And he had some aftermarket Volvo rads on the shelf if he'd wanted to try and take more money from me, but never mentioned them - said my unit looked pretty good and prob. just needed cleaning out.

      BTW - engine sure is quieter with the new TB tensioner in there - looks like I replaced the OE one just in time.
      --
      Bob (81-244GL B21F, 83-244DL B23F, 94-940Sedan B230F)








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    Radiator Story 200

    I'd have to agree with your radiator guy. Your radiator lasted twenty years. I'd expect some build up inside and out.

    Hopefully, of course, you've replaced all of the quicker wearing items (hoses, gaskets, thermostat, etc) at least once or twice.

    - alex

    '85 244 Turbo
    '84 245 Turbo








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    Radiator Story 200

    Did you always use distilled water, Bob?







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