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Thread: Coolant loss - what connects to header tank

  1. #1
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    Coolant loss - what connects to header tank

    I went for a 20 minute drive today, stopped with engine running, and there was a puddle of coolant under the car. 5 minute drive home, watched the temp on the nanocom pulling a trailer load of wood, temp stayed under 97 degrees and was still cooling, still holding a substantial amount of coolant in the system. On investigation, coolant is pouring out from the connection on the bottom of the reservoir, but I cannot find any disconnected pipes.

    Checking RAVE, it seems there should be a pipe connecting from here to the EGR cooler, but there never has been one for some years. So if the EGR has been deleted, what should be plugging this hole ? It is a 2003 EU3 model.

    coolant leak.jpg

    As a temporary fix, I have corked it with some rubber, and just been for a test drive fully expecting it to fail, but it has held. Of course it will now fail at the worst possible moment, so I am lost as to what has changed, what has come out and is now missing. After the run there is no coolant leaking so there is no missing pipe hiding somewhere ?

    Any ideas gratefully received as it needs to be fixed correctly.

    Thank you.

    Matt.

  2. #2
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    Before replacement with the Allisport tank, mine was leaking slightly, but only intermittently due to a very small crack. Check carefully for that common issue.
    If you don't like trucks, stop buying stuff.
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    I'll be installing mine tonight, it's fantastic quality

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    Veeery Beauty!!!
    Oh to be rich.( but I own a D2)
    (which BTW has not cost me too much money over the 7years I have owned it but a LOT of manual labour in preempting the usual problems That spiral into extreme expense like transmission lines, FPR hose, FPR, VC bearing, leaking exhaust manifold, water pump, regularly changing 4HP22 fluid, diff seals etc etc.)
    I think the mods have cost me more


    REgards PhilipA

  5. #5
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    That looks like an EU2 header tank, The bit that leaks does not have a pipe on it.

    header tank_LI.jpg

    Here you can see the EGR cooler pipe, sealed at the bottom. If coolant is coming out of there, then you have a leaky tank
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  6. #6
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    So what is the hole for I have circled in the first post. There is nothing connecting into it, but it was certainly where the coolant was pouring out from. I thought there might have been some kind of plug in it that had come off (which worried me due to pressurization), but looking at replacement tanks, none of them have anything in it, just a hole. I am stumped.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by PhilipA View Post
    Veeery Beauty!!!
    Oh to be rich.( but I own a D2)
    (which BTW has not cost me too much money over the 7years I have owned it but a LOT of manual labour in preempting the usual problems That spiral into extreme expense like transmission lines, FPR hose, FPR, VC bearing, leaking exhaust manifold, water pump, regularly changing 4HP22 fluid, diff seals etc etc.)
    I think the mods have cost me more


    REgards PhilipA
    I know what you mean Philip, I believe mine is having a mid-life crisis also. Past 3 years, water-pump, alternator, master cylinder, 2 x hubs, FPR, fuel pump, warped manifold, all the bits that are meant to wear out have been true to form. But as you say, we get to do all these things ourselves, labour is free, and wouldn't swap it for any other vehicle (within budget). I love the fact that with a few mods, no D2's are the same.

  8. #8
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    No idea what that hole is. Maybe different models (BMW) had a hose there. Does it leak out of the hole? have you filled it with water away from the car and watched?
    D2a Td5 Manual, Chawton White. aka "Daisy"
    Build date 11th Oct 2003
    Freelander 2 2011, manual, the daughter calls it Perri
    Before I had a Land Rover I did not have any torque wrenches. Now I have three.
    LROCV #1410

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    Quote Originally Posted by surfingooner View Post
    So what is the hole for I have circled in the first post. There is nothing connecting into it, but it was certainly where the coolant was pouring out from. I thought there might have been some kind of plug in it that had come off (which worried me due to pressurization), but looking at replacement tanks, none of them have anything in it, just a hole. I am stumped.
    That port was originally for the EGR cooler return that's a fact so if the EGR was deleted this port is futile so you need a Eu2 tank which doesnt have this port at all as it didnt have EGR cooler, you can buy BMW E30 tank which has a low level warning switch too, see from the following post and beyond td5 engine saver low water level alarm
    Discovery Td5 (2000), manual, tuned

  10. #10
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    Coolant loss - what connects to header tank

    Quote Originally Posted by surfingooner View Post
    I went for a 20 minute drive today, stopped with engine running, and there was a puddle of coolant under the car. 5 minute drive home, watched the temp on the nanocom pulling a trailer load of wood, temp stayed under 97 degrees and was still cooling, still holding a substantial amount of coolant in the system. On investigation, coolant is pouring out from the connection on the bottom of the reservoir, but I cannot find any disconnected pipes.

    Checking RAVE, it seems there should be a pipe connecting from here to the EGR cooler, but there never has been one for some years. So if the EGR has been deleted, what should be plugging this hole ? It is a 2003 EU3 model.

    coolant leak.jpg

    As a temporary fix, I have corked it with some rubber, and just been for a test drive fully expecting it to fail, but it has held. Of course it will now fail at the worst possible moment, so I am lost as to what has changed, what has come out and is now missing. After the run there is no coolant leaking so there is no missing pipe hiding somewhere ?

    Any ideas gratefully received as it needs to be fixed correctly.

    Thank you.

    Matt.
    You probably had a small pipe acting as a plug that has fallen off.

    Pretty sure I plugged mine up with a short bolt and some thread tape that was then clamped on a small section of pipe when I removed all the EGR bits.

    Was it a new expansion tank or the original tank leaking?

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