I agree with that and have changed the heading. I shall post a new pinned topic with those cars that do not take the later cap and work on a list for the FWD.
Bill.
Update your Radiator Cap! 2/7/9 series.
This topic is in the MVS Volvo Repair Database »
Update your Radiator CapS! 200/700/900 Series Volvos
- billofdurham
- MVS Moderator
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- Joined: 2 February 2006
- Year and Model: 855, 1995
- Location: Durham, England
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Re: Update your Radiator Cap! 2/7/9 series.
Work was good - retirement is better.
1996 850GLT 2.5 20v Estate Manual.
1995 Peugeot Boxer 2.5Tdi Autosleeper.
Previously:
1984 244DL, Manual, Beige.
1987 744GLE, Manual, Green.
1991 960 3.0 24v, Auto, Silver.
1994 940T Wentworth, Auto, Blue.
1996 850GLT 2.5 20v Estate Manual.
1995 Peugeot Boxer 2.5Tdi Autosleeper.
Previously:
1984 244DL, Manual, Beige.
1987 744GLE, Manual, Green.
1991 960 3.0 24v, Auto, Silver.
1994 940T Wentworth, Auto, Blue.
Just had an issue with one of the green Caps bought bfrom my Volvo dealer. It was holding WAY too much pressure and I eventually had a thermostat come apart. If I had not had a slight leak at my heater control valve i would have likely seen the tank blown apart. I had noticed the tank balooning at times after installing the new cap and when we checked it it would not release preasure at all!
1998 V-90, 1995 Mercedes E-420
- billofdurham
- MVS Moderator
- Posts: 6507
- Joined: 2 February 2006
- Year and Model: 855, 1995
- Location: Durham, England
- Been thanked: 5 times
Welcome to Matthew's Volvo Site.
It is not a typo. The B230ET was fitted to cars in Europe and elsewhere, but not in the US. It was an injected engine without a Lambda or catalytic converter.
My apologies, I missed the '86 740 B230FT from the list. It does take the 1.5 bar cap.
Bill.
It is not a typo. The B230ET was fitted to cars in Europe and elsewhere, but not in the US. It was an injected engine without a Lambda or catalytic converter.
My apologies, I missed the '86 740 B230FT from the list. It does take the 1.5 bar cap.
Bill.
Work was good - retirement is better.
1996 850GLT 2.5 20v Estate Manual.
1995 Peugeot Boxer 2.5Tdi Autosleeper.
Previously:
1984 244DL, Manual, Beige.
1987 744GLE, Manual, Green.
1991 960 3.0 24v, Auto, Silver.
1994 940T Wentworth, Auto, Blue.
1996 850GLT 2.5 20v Estate Manual.
1995 Peugeot Boxer 2.5Tdi Autosleeper.
Previously:
1984 244DL, Manual, Beige.
1987 744GLE, Manual, Green.
1991 960 3.0 24v, Auto, Silver.
1994 940T Wentworth, Auto, Blue.
I would definitely stick with the 75kpa rated reservoir cap. The green 150kpa can over pressure your system in the older volvos and give you exciting repair tree explorations.
My brief experiment with the high pressure cap led to failure of a three year old radiator at the reservoir hose junction. Which led to electric evaporator fan failure, which led to alternator failure.
My brick is a 1990 740GL wagon, non-turbo, with only 128K miles and has been aggressively maintained.
My brief experiment with the high pressure cap led to failure of a three year old radiator at the reservoir hose junction. Which led to electric evaporator fan failure, which led to alternator failure.
My brick is a 1990 740GL wagon, non-turbo, with only 128K miles and has been aggressively maintained.
-
BerniniCaCO3
- Posts: 39
- Joined: 5 February 2010
- Year and Model: V70XC / 2001
- Location: Towson, MD
A buddy with a crown vic went through 4 heater cores before he figured out it was the (wrong) new radiator cap he'd put on a year and a half ago!
I wanted to ask, in line with this thread: is vacuum another animal?
If you vacuum-fill your coolant, using 25-30lbs of vacuum, can that also do damage to a system rated for 16psi of pressure?
If you're not familiar with it; what you do is have a pneumatic vacuum "pump" (there is no pumping action; the escaping air draws the vacuum), to put a vacuum on the entire cooling system, and then open up a valve going to your coolant jug and the vacuum pulls coolant into the entire system. Works wonders if there's oddball plumbing that likes to trap air pockets.
Can any damage result though? I've wondered.
I wanted to ask, in line with this thread: is vacuum another animal?
If you vacuum-fill your coolant, using 25-30lbs of vacuum, can that also do damage to a system rated for 16psi of pressure?
If you're not familiar with it; what you do is have a pneumatic vacuum "pump" (there is no pumping action; the escaping air draws the vacuum), to put a vacuum on the entire cooling system, and then open up a valve going to your coolant jug and the vacuum pulls coolant into the entire system. Works wonders if there's oddball plumbing that likes to trap air pockets.
Can any damage result though? I've wondered.
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