1969CoronetR/T
Well-Known Member
I drove it to work yesterday and stopped for coffee on the way into work (about 70 degrees at 6:30 am). I noticed a small plume of white smoke coming out of the back of the engine on the passenger side through the hood. I opened the hood and all liked fine so I proceeded to drive the rest of the way to work and keep on eye on the temperature gauge. I parked it in the warehouse and went to work. Four hours later, at 11:00 am, I noticed a pool of fluid under the car and tried to take the radiator cap off, but it would not come off. Started it up and drove to get lunch and the gauge stayed in the normal operating range (just a bit to the left of the first bar inside the bars). Parked it after lunch and four hours later, around 4:00 pm, I went to check the coolant and again could not take the cap off to check the level. No fluid purged this time so I figured it was fine at lunch so it should be fine to drive it back home and have it checked out on Saturday. 90 degrees outside now and about five miles down the road the needle started to climb to the the right. It pegged and I shut the car off and pulled into a parking lot. I opened the hood and called AAA. An hour and a half later a flatbed showed up and I had it towed to my warehouse as it started to rain heavily and the shop a half hour away near my house (where I was heading to) closed for the night.
What could cause the engine to purge coolant and overheat so fast? Also, any damage to the aluminum heads if the temperature gauge pegged for a minute before I could get it off the raod and shut it off?
Here are the details of the engine and it has a fan shroud and stock fan with a transmission cooler.
(440 engine bored .040 and stroked to a 499 cid using an Eagle rotating assembly, .040 Wiseco pistons, roller camshaft (do not know brand, maybe Comp Cams) Harland Sharp roller hydraulic lifters, high volume Melling oil pump, 3000 stall converter with ported Indy EZ-1 heads and port matched Indy intake. The cam is 545 lift with a 235/241 duration and 110 lobe separator / 106 centerline. The compression is 9.6 to 1.)
Thanks again guys,
Mark
What could cause the engine to purge coolant and overheat so fast? Also, any damage to the aluminum heads if the temperature gauge pegged for a minute before I could get it off the raod and shut it off?
Here are the details of the engine and it has a fan shroud and stock fan with a transmission cooler.
(440 engine bored .040 and stroked to a 499 cid using an Eagle rotating assembly, .040 Wiseco pistons, roller camshaft (do not know brand, maybe Comp Cams) Harland Sharp roller hydraulic lifters, high volume Melling oil pump, 3000 stall converter with ported Indy EZ-1 heads and port matched Indy intake. The cam is 545 lift with a 235/241 duration and 110 lobe separator / 106 centerline. The compression is 9.6 to 1.)
Thanks again guys,
Mark