taylorhayis Posted May 14, 2015 Share Posted May 14, 2015 I have read the service manual bits covering water pump, and not getting heaps of info. I think I know what to do, but wondering if anyone has any suggestions or pro tips for me I would much appreciate! My plan is... 1. Drain the coolant 2. Find the water pump 3. Remove any hoses or anything 4. take it off 5. Scrape the gasket @!*% off 6. Put gasket on new pump and install using torque specs in FSM 7. refill coolant and cross my fingers? Am I missing anything crucial in there? Cheers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nunya Posted May 14, 2015 Share Posted May 14, 2015 You forgot beer! Don't rush, make sure the gasket surface is clean before install, after refilling if possible park your truck on some form of incline with the front end being uphill (don't need to be a mountain, just not level). It will help with bleeding air out of the coolant system (I've never used the bleeder on the upper hose on mine) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
taylorhayis Posted May 14, 2015 Author Share Posted May 14, 2015 You forgot beer! Don't rush, make sure the gasket surface is clean before install, after refilling if possible park your truck on some form of incline with the front end being uphill (don't need to be a mountain, just not level). It will help with bleeding air out of the coolant system (I've never used the bleeder on the upper hose on mine) How could I!!! Include a beer break between each of those steps. Thanks for the confirmation, and the sweet tilty air bleed tip. Fingers crossed the parts arrive today... I gotta get under the bonnet of this beast!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RedPath88 Posted May 15, 2015 Share Posted May 15, 2015 Yeah it's a 4cyl from '89, should not be all that complicated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
taylorhayis Posted May 15, 2015 Author Share Posted May 15, 2015 Nothing worse than sitting in front of your computer working with this sitting in front of you... Working in a design studio when I'd rather be a greesemonkey - it's tricky! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Precise1 Posted May 15, 2015 Share Posted May 15, 2015 Want to trade?? B Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
taylorhayis Posted May 16, 2015 Author Share Posted May 16, 2015 Alright! Water pump went fine - no biggie! The thermostat was a good call, as It didnt have one in there before! But when I was refilling the coolant, it started pouring out from the back of the engine. POURING. I tracked it down to a ~25mm brass coloured stem that sticks into the manifold down below the carby... the heater coil runs into it, and then into the engine. Does this ring a bell? What in the heck is it... one of the outlet pipes on it is completely rusted apart. Any idea what it is, and if I can just bypass it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RedPath88 Posted May 16, 2015 Share Posted May 16, 2015 Are you referring to one of the two lines in the top image? These run to the firewall heater inlets, correct? Do you want your heater? Can you even by pass them, or are they damaged at the manifold connections? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
taylorhayis Posted May 16, 2015 Author Share Posted May 16, 2015 Nah it wasnt those. It was this guy, which took a tremendous amount of googleing to figure out what it was! Appologies for my poor explanation - I was a bit flustered. Turns out I cant be stuffed ordering one and waiting around. So I made a new one... Its an ugly sucker... Found some scrap pipe at the shop Was out of argon, so I used MIG gas on the TIG. Worked well enough for me! I'm not great at welding out pipe anyway. Welded out and cleaned up a bit Hit it with cold galv inside and out, to possibly slow down the rust. One of the little pipes was stainless, but the other and the filler is mild steel. It's installed and works a treat!! Went out for a test drive and my brakes dont work. But I'll make another post for that... Cheers, Taylor 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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