Jag X350 untraceable coolant leak

Jag X350 untraceable coolant leak

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Discussion

Risonax

Original Poster:

281 posts

18 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
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The initial message was deleted from this topic on 10 November 2023 at 23:29

Semmelweiss

1,646 posts

198 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
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Thermostat housing. It's plastic and gets brittle with age. First thing I did when I got my X350 XJ8. Slow but persistent coolant loss.

Getragdogleg

8,823 posts

185 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
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Borescope down the pistons and see which one is cleanest. That's where the head gasket is weeping or which liner has gone porus.

stevemcs

8,719 posts

95 months

Thursday 15th June 2023
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Anything wet inside the footwell ?

reddiesel

2,098 posts

49 months

Friday 16th June 2023
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I suspect the expansion tank , more often than not as soon as the tank gets warm they weep at the seams

996Keef

435 posts

93 months

Friday 16th June 2023
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Get a UV dye and torch kit

Put the dye in and run it , then go looking with your magic torch.

It's going somewhere, if you can't find it with the torch , then it's drinking it

Semmelweiss

1,646 posts

198 months

Friday 16th June 2023
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reddiesel said:
I suspect the expansion tank , more often than not as soon as the tank gets warm they weep at the seams
Good shout. The union at the overflow easily snaps, and the float switch eventually doesn't float! Easy DIY replacement in about 30 minutes. The complete tank available from Berkshire Jag components for about £26.

McGee_22

6,776 posts

181 months

Friday 16th June 2023
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996Keef said:
Get a UV dye and torch kit

Put the dye in and run it , then go looking with your magic torch.

It's going somewhere, if you can't find it with the torch , then it's drinking it
This. Works every time and shows the smallest leaks.

V12 Migaloo

817 posts

148 months

Monday 19th June 2023
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McGee_22 said:
996Keef said:
Get a UV dye and torch kit

Put the dye in and run it , then go looking with your magic torch.

It's going somewhere, if you can't find it with the torch , then it's drinking it
This. Works every time and shows the smallest leaks.
What a great tip!!

Patrick Bateman

12,220 posts

176 months

Monday 26th June 2023
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Is the heater matrix a possibility?

My Clio used to use lose coolant and it was the matrix that needed replacing. No visible leaks but there was a smell of coolant.

Have they pressure tested the system and kept it under pressure for an extended period of time?

alabbasi

2,521 posts

89 months

Sunday 23rd July 2023
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If it's not leaking externally, it's leaking internally. Time for a leak down test.

kev b

2,716 posts

168 months

Friday 28th July 2023
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Nothing to lose so you could try using superglue and bicarbonate of soda to seal the leak.

Probably not a permanent repair but I’ve used this method on broken plastic parts many times.

Semmelweiss

1,646 posts

198 months

Friday 28th July 2023
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Risonax said:
The issue is the a dignosed cracked plastic thermostat house. The bigger issue is Jaguar have discontinued the part, with no replacement. No UK stock.

Guess the car is now parts only. Shame.

Anyone know of sources for complete thermostat housing, non-supercharged V8 X350.
Berkshire Jaguar Components?

Semmelweiss

1,646 posts

198 months

Friday 28th July 2023
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kev b said:
Nothing to lose so you could try using superglue and bicarbonate of soda to seal the leak.

Probably not a permanent repair but I’ve used this method on broken plastic parts many times.
The Thermostat housings become brittle with age, and are cheap enough to replace. If you are going to drain the coolant, jack the car high up enough, removing it, degreasing it, and making a temporary repair is probably not worth the effort.

P700DEE

1,121 posts

232 months

Friday 28th July 2023
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Same thermostat fitting for standard and Supercharged so upgrade to an Aluminium one! That's probably the reason the plastic ones arn't made any more. Might even be the same as the XK8/R

Semmelweiss

1,646 posts

198 months

Sunday 8th October 2023
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You can flush the heater core matrix before buying anything. It's probably gunged up. It's a common fault, usual symptoms are driver's side heating doesn't work, or cooler than passenger side.




alabbasi

2,521 posts

89 months

Sunday 8th October 2023
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Do it the old way. Jack the car up in the front using axle stands as high as you can go so the nose is higher than the heater core. The the system with the heater turned on and the fan running full blast

McGee_22

6,776 posts

181 months

Sunday 8th October 2023
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There are tips and tricks to refilling and building most coolant systems - for my E39 V8 it is have the front of the car higher (a slope or kerb will do) but also to fill it not through the header tank but through the (disconnected) top radiator hose.

kev b

2,716 posts

168 months

Sunday 8th October 2023
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Try using a vacuum coolant bleeder, they are straight forward to use the only drawback is you need an air compressor.

I used one with great success on a Porsche Cayman which has a pretty convoluted cooling system, saving me a lot of faffing about with the bonus of knowing there were no surprise airlocks to show up later.

When you vacuum the system down you can leave it for half an hour to check for leaks too.

GeniusOfLove

1,474 posts

14 months

Sunday 22nd October 2023
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kev b said:
Try using a vacuum coolant bleeder, they are straight forward to use the only drawback is you need an air compressor.

I used one with great success on a Porsche Cayman which has a pretty convoluted cooling system, saving me a lot of faffing about with the bonus of knowing there were no surprise airlocks to show up later.

When you vacuum the system down you can leave it for half an hour to check for leaks too.
Just used one of these for the first time to fill an X150 XKR 5.0 which requires you to remove the coolant bottle and hold it in the air to try and fill it manually, and always gets airlocks. It was absolutely superb, sucked all the hoses flat, kept the vacuum for a while to make sure the system was sealed properly, then it filled the system from a bucket in about 45-60 seconds. No airlocks at all!