
I've topped it up once a few weeks ago but on checking this morning it seems to be down again

Any suggestions would be very much appreciated

Moderators: Doone, westonwarrior
if your constantly tightening them up be prepared for one or more to snap without warning. replace them often, or better still remove them and replace with haydns clips which allow for the constant exp and contraction. or replace your hoses and clips for the proper mazda originals.al & chris wrote:Have you got silicone hoses on. We have to constantly tighten them up. Could be one of the many.
pressure test the system and get the cap tested, that should show you where.dandemann8 wrote:Hello and good morning, as the title says I'm getting a slight coolant loss from my header tank with no obvious clues as to where it's going and was hoping someone may be able to shed some light on this![]()
I've topped it up once a few weeks ago but on checking this morning it seems to be down again![]()
Any suggestions would be very much appreciated
Cheers Ady, that will be this weekend's first jobNorthern Bongolow wrote:pressure test the system and get the cap tested, that should show you where.dandemann8 wrote:Hello and good morning, as the title says I'm getting a slight coolant loss from my header tank with no obvious clues as to where it's going and was hoping someone may be able to shed some light on this![]()
I've topped it up once a few weeks ago but on checking this morning it seems to be down again![]()
Any suggestions would be very much appreciated
Flat capNorthern Bongolow wrote:put a flat cap on the expansion tank, and inflate with a pump to no more than 1 bar via the over flow pipe on the exp tank.
Got it booked in for Saturday morning, but what exactly do they do and how's it workNorthern Bongolow wrote:prob best for the garage to do a pressure test.
And I'm guessing this is done coldwiddowson2008 wrote:This diagram shows how the expansion tank cap works and what it does. There are basically 2 seals, the top one and the lower one.
What Ady is saying is that if you replace the cap with one that has the top seal only (no lower seal, spring and red valve), then the system is open to atmosphere via the little black tube (top left). By connecting a pump to this small black hose you can artificially pressurise the system.
Once you have reached a pressure of 1 bar, leave it fo a few minutes and note the pressure gauge. If the pressure drops, then you have a leak somewhere and it should be easy to spot.
As Ady has said, DON'T exceed 1 bar or you may damage hoses and cause additional leaks.
and DON'T forget to put the correct cap back when you have finished