Results 1 to 10 of 29
-
November 4th, 2006 02:02 PM #1
The Vitara overheated last night. Cooling system was bone dry. The engine fan and electric fan apparently both work. Coolant, all major filters, spark plugs, and all major fluids are around 7,000kms. old.
Afrasay's cousin, Ferdie, took a look at it today. He is suspecting a cylinder head gasket leak (hence no obvious leaks on the garage floor). He is also suspecting a bad waterpump (the rig is nearing 90,000kms).
His suggestion is to replace the cylinder head gasket, water pump, and thermostat [dahil baklas na din lahat]. Since the rig is almost 90,000kms, sabi I suggested doing a t-belt replacement if the engine will be taken apart anyways.
Labor for replacing the t-belt, t-belt tensioner, head gasket, water pump, and thermostat is Php2,000 (Php1,800 if without t-belt and t-belt tensioner replacement). Fair enough ba? Two days to finish. Mag-isa lang siyang gagawa.
Here is his suggested shopping list:
-OEM Head Gasket
-Water pump
-Thermostat
-OEM T-belt
-OEM T-belt tensioner
-Radiator cap (dinagdag ko lang, wala akong tiwala dun sa 'HKT' na rad cap)
Inputs would be appreciated. Any idea about the prices of these parts and where they can be sourced at reasonable cost?
http://docotep.multiply.com/
Need an Ambulance? We sell Zic Brand Oils and Lubricants. Please PM me.
-
November 4th, 2006 08:44 PM #2
IMO the labor cost is very reasonable. heck on the "napapaso ang mekaniko" mazda 323 and 626 the t-belt labor alone costs about that much..
-
Verified Tsikot Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2004
- Posts
- 132
November 4th, 2006 09:05 PM #3our vitara timing belt replacement labor cost=2.2k. last jan lang.
tb-1850 oem
tensioner- 1720 oem
pilhino prices yan. similar naman presyo sa iba (links banawe)
yun oil seals i cant remember pero mura lang. replacement (nok yata yun)
two months ago same problem yun vit sa overheat.
head gasket-18++. oem
labor- 2.5k
-
Verified Tsikot Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Posts
- 142
November 4th, 2006 09:15 PM #4Agree, labor cost is reasonable enough.
Bro about parts, try mo pumasok sa suzuki car club d2, maraming member doon ng vitarantados club and more or less makapagbibigay cla sa 'yo ng options sa mga parts at availability kung saan makakabili ng mura.
Alam ko kinukunan nila ay "olympia" sa banawe, not sure though if kumpleto.
-
November 4th, 2006 09:19 PM #5
-
November 4th, 2006 10:03 PM #6
replace all head bolts,you'll never know which one is over stretch. Might as well replace the valve guides and seals.Make sure to torque the head bolts to oem specs.That's the one thing i love in the phil. the labor is fuc$ing cheap.Usually the problem with your car,it will run you $1500 or more.
-
November 4th, 2006 10:45 PM #7
Ok, we decided to step back a little. I took out the thermostat earlier tonight (with much swearing as I had forgotten to bring my socket wrench set and breaker bar). Unfortunately, I could not bench test it on the spot (long story). What I did note was that the thermostat was rust colored all over (ain't it supposed to be silver when new?) and that it was quite difficult to move.
The former owner (the unit was acquired August 2005) also used liquid gasket (instead of OEM gasket) and much of it ended up inside the thermostat housing. I even had a hard time breaking the thermostat free due to the abundance of liquid gasket.
Is it ok if we just swap in a new thermostat, thermostat gasket, and new OEM radiator cap first then observe for overheating?
What are good signs of a blown head gasket?
reniram,
Yep, I'm also in contact with some Vitarantados regarding the problem. Olympia has a good selection of OEM parts, but their selection of replacement parts is a bit expensive (I just use replacements for consumables). But since we're planning to use OEM parts, they're worth a try. Links in Banawe is another shop they recommend for Vitara-specific OEM parts.Last edited by OTEP; November 4th, 2006 at 10:56 PM.
http://docotep.multiply.com/
Need an Ambulance? We sell Zic Brand Oils and Lubricants. Please PM me.
-
Tsikot Member Rank 5
- Join Date
- Nov 2003
- Posts
- 3,849
November 5th, 2006 12:43 PM #8if you pull the head then replace the valve seals. getting a replacement overhauling gasket might be better at least all of the parts are included.
after replacing the thermostat, check to see if the water jumps out when you start the car and the rad is full. if it does, then it's time to open up the head.
-
November 5th, 2006 10:05 PM #9
Buti dyan, P2000 lang labor for rebuilding an engine! Eh dito sa US, $1000 for a completely rebuilt engine (labor lang ha).
Doc, how is the engine oil? Malapot ba? You mentioned no garage floor leaks, so the coolant has to go somewhere...
Is your exhaust smoke white?
Good (good nga ba?) signs of a blown headgasket:
-White exhaust smoke (burning coolant)
-Muddy/milky/murky brown oil color
-Loss of coolant with no external leaks
-
November 5th, 2006 10:09 PM #10
Wala akong nakikitang smoke (that's the first place I looked). Yung oil maitim naman. Yung loss of coolant lang.
Possible kayang barado lang yung thermostat causing water to escape as steam? Hindi ko din sure kung tumitingin sa gauge yung nagmamaneho ng Vitara, eh. hehehe. Yung a/c comp bearing medyo maingay din nga (napansin ko lang nitong nag-overheat na). Try ko muna ayusin cooling system issues bago ko padala kay Mang Mario.
http://docotep.multiply.com/
Need an Ambulance? We sell Zic Brand Oils and Lubricants. Please PM me.
there's this youtube article, about a 2000s altis, that had a high rpm on cold start (2000+ daw),...
high idle RPM at engine start