Hi It'sNotWorthComplaining!,
Your loss of cooling fluid may be due to something less expensive than a blown head gasket. We also had a coolant leak after switching to OAT coolant on our Discovery II V8. The coolant was leaking from somewhere under the air-conditioning compressor, and flowing down the side of the engine and onto the sump. On tracing back the stained flow line of the red-orange marks of the OAT coolant, it at first looked like they originated from a major head gasket problem, but on further investigation, the cause was a crack in the plastic pipe coming from the throttle body de-icer. The plastic pipe had become brittle and snapped, and thus leaked coolant even though the crack was not visible until the pipe was moved. See the link to the thread
http://www.aulro.com/afvb/discovery-...ant-pipes.html
Hence, testing the cooling system with a radiator pressure tester may be worth while to see if there is a pressure drop due to a leaking hose or pipe.
Usually, with a head gasket failure, you will have coolant in the engine oil, and oil in the cooling system. There also will be excessive steam and water coming out of the exhaust pipe when the engine is at operating temperature.
A simple test to determine the presence of water in the engine oil is to remove the oil filler cap, and if there is a white, milky sludge underneath it, there is definitely water in the oil. To locate the cylinder or cylinders concerned, simply remove the spark plugs. The plugs in the affected cylinders will look new and clean due to their being steamed cleaned by coolant in the oil.
Alternatively, if you suspect that a cylinder head gasket is leaking, you could test the cooling system fluid with a combustion block tester or a combustion leak tester to determine if there are exhaust gases in the cooling system.
LRT
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