Years ago, thermostats always used to fail in the open positionmikeonb4c wrote:Wish I'd asked for the old faulty one on my Nissan Sunny to be returned to me for analysis as it was one that definitely failed leaving the passageway permanently open..



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Years ago, thermostats always used to fail in the open positionmikeonb4c wrote:Wish I'd asked for the old faulty one on my Nissan Sunny to be returned to me for analysis as it was one that definitely failed leaving the passageway permanently open..
Interesting is that Andy as our V6 LPG runs on petrol until the coolant reaches 50 degrees, tried it at 40 when we first had it converted but it started hunting for revs and then stalledThe LPG system uses heat from the engine coolant and from cold runs on petrol until the coolant is 40 degrees, hence the comment above.
It was the pressure switch, which needed replacing. BTW, the oil pressure switch for the V6 is the same as that found on the diesel engine. 45 minute job at the garage, £25 labour, I supplied the switch.missfixit70 wrote:The diesel has a low level indication on the oil pressure light, wonder if the V6 does too? worth checking the level, especially if it's not long since been done, may be a slight leak on the filter or plug, or it could just be the level was a bit low from the oil change & it's only showing up with the higher viscosity in colder temperatures (slower return to sump on cold start up?)Ian wrote:I'm experiencing exactly the same problem on my V6, plus an additional fault. The oil light flickers on and off until the engine is fully warm. Then it goes off, and stays off.apole wrote:Hi there,
Yesterday I went out in the bongo and found that it didn't properly warm up for nearly 10 miles. That is very much longer than it has ever taken, normally the gauge is up in a mile or 2. Heater wasn't that much cop either.
Thinking my thermostat is pooped, luckily a new one is going in next week.
I appreciate the colder weather will have an impact but never taken that long before.
Anyone else had this?
Andy
Marvellous. One bit of the world of automotive problems that hasn't changed in 40yrs then, when my old Morris 1000 showed the same symptoms and responded to the same treatmentIan wrote: It was the pressure switch, which needed replacing. BTW, the oil pressure switch for the V6 is the same as that found on the diesel engine. 45 minute job at the garage, £25 labour, I supplied the switch.