Overheating climbing hills at low speeds
#1
Overheating climbing hills at low speeds
My car is a 93SSEi with 116K miles. It always runs a little hot. Normally around 210, but 220 on hot days or slow traffic. However, when climbing hills at lower speeds, like 2 lane mountain roads it overheats quite quickly.
Yesterday we were in Idyllwild at around 6000 feet and just drove 15 minutes to the upper end of town, a 600 foot elevation increase, and it almost got into the red. Travel speed was low, 25-30 mph. When that happens it won't restart until it has cooled off for 30-45 minutes.
Coolant level was good. Both fans were running when we stopped
Yesterday we were in Idyllwild at around 6000 feet and just drove 15 minutes to the upper end of town, a 600 foot elevation increase, and it almost got into the red. Travel speed was low, 25-30 mph. When that happens it won't restart until it has cooled off for 30-45 minutes.
Coolant level was good. Both fans were running when we stopped
#2
Senior Member
True Car Nut
It sounds like you might have a radiator that is plugged or a water pump issue. Flush the cooling system and verify that the water pump is moving water. Then refill with fresh green coolant and see what happens.
#3
Senior Member
Posts like a Corvette
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Jersey Shore
Posts: 1,511
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Going up hills puts the most load on engine. Idk what the hill climbing RPM'* on bonnes are ( I live on the coast not too many hills) but alot of things come into play. Higher the RPMS water pump does run faster but running higher rpm'* make it heat up faster. Lower RPM'* slower water pump speed and lower RPM'* high loads is bad for a gasoline engine. knock and stuff like that.
In conclusion change the fluid, thermostat and check the water pump and go from there. if anyone knows anymore on my second paragraph you can rip me apart if I'm totally wrong.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
tumbleweed
Your Other Rides: Pics & Videos
0
01-06-2007 09:54 PM