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Oil in coolant :/

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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 03:39 PM
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Default Oil in coolant :/

So when i looked at the small hose on the neck of the filler on the radiator I saw that it was REALLY oily and squishy, popped open the radiator cap and found a shitload of oil...buttt...the car has no sign of a blown headgasket, no white smoke, it could idle for hours, i drove 300 miles to l.a. and back so a total of 600 miles, drove another 160 miles roundtrip to a small town in the central valley. I know i shouldn't have drove it that far but I forgot all about it until yesterday when i popped open the hood and saw the hose again,the oil on the dipstick looks fine, no milky substance, and the motor is not knocking or ticking whatsoever. What do you guys think it could be? It doesn't have an oil cooler so idk...I'm going to drain it out tonight after work and just run on water for the time being and hopefully i dont find anymore oil in it.
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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 03:45 PM
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Do you have power steering cooler? If you do, highly likely you do since you have a SS model, your PS cooler unit got a leak therefore you will get a mix of PS fluid with your coolant fluid.
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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 03:48 PM
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hmm I'm not too sure, how do I go about checking if I have one? and if it makes it any useful, when I looked at the oil in the radiator it wasn't milky, it was just dark oil...would PS oil look like this when mixed with coolant? in my LT1 i had oil in my radiator from the sandwich oil cooler adapter and when i drained it, it looked like straight up chocolate milk lol.
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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 03:53 PM
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Originally Posted by LT1559
hmm I'm not too sure, how do I go about checking if I have one? and if it makes it any useful, when I looked at the oil in the radiator it wasn't milky, it was just dark oil...would PS oil look like this when mixed with coolant? in my LT1 i had oil in my radiator from the sandwich oil cooler adapter and when i drained it, it looked like straight up chocolate milk lol.
I 'd these what I found for you...



pic of the PS fluid mixed w/ the coolant.



This is what it looks like. It should be between your motor and the radiator.
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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 04:18 PM
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If your PS fluid looks like chocolate milk, its your PS cooler
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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 04:26 PM
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If you do have one of those complete pieces of crap GM factory power steering fluid coolers.......which DO NOT work unless your running hard on a road course, but then if you are the rest of the car will fall apart....lol

Go here and spend about $40.00 and 30 minutes putting on an aftermarket cooler....and ACTUALLY cool down the power steering fluid. No matter what any clown says...DO NOT put another GM factory cooler on there.

Enjoy:
https://ls1tech.com/forums/general-m...cooler+success

You also need to do this....and do it exactly like it says. You must get all that crap out of the engine block:
Best/easiest way to flush and get every drop of old coolant out.

-Cold engine.
-Remove radiator fill cap.
-Remove the t-stat from the housing. Leave the housing attached to the rubber radiator hose, just remove the 2 housing bolts and pull it away from the water to pump to get to the t-stat. (2-3 minute job).
-Put t-stat housing back on. (1 minute) Just put one bolt in, no need to put them both in, there’s no pressure in the system during the flush.
-Take the entire radiator drain valve (petcock) "off" and let it drain, don't just open the valve itself. It'll drain faster with it off and that’s what you want. ((Buy a new petcock valve before starting this flush process, sometimes they break when you remove them all the way just because they're cheap plastic and they get briddle over time, they're like $2.00))
-Take a hose and stick it in the radiator fill cap, running medium to high.
-Start the engine.
-Turn heat on full blast
-Let it run for about 15-20 minutes or until the water is running out the drain CLEAR.
-((If you want to, you can wait till it runs clear, "close" the drain valve, add some degreaser (I use ½ gallon of Formula 88 to clean mine) and let it run for 15 minutes, then let it sit for 15 minutes, then run it for 5 minutes, then drain it all again. Then open the drain and put the hose in for about 5 minutes run it all out till its CLEAR. The degreaser will help break up the crap thats stuck DEEP in the BLOCK that sits and swirls and doesn't like to come out.)) ***NO…degreaser will not hurt anything.***
-When it runs clear your entire system is clean.
-Remove the overflow reservoir from the car and clean it out real good. (I had to use gasoline to clean mine out because the sludge and grime was so thick inside. The gas broke it all down and then it flushed right out. I filled it about 1/3 up with gasoline and shook the hell out of it real vigorously, the black stuff kept coming out. I did that like 4 separate times with gasoline till no more chunks of black crap came out. Make sure the lines that go to the reservoir are also cleaned out. Or just buy a new piece of 3/8” heater hose and replace that line, 3 feet will do, then cut to fit. My sludge came from my power steering fluid leaking into my coolant system.)
-Put the t-stat back in.
-Put the overflow reservoir back in.
-Put the drain valve back in. Use the new one, what the hell.
-Put half a jug of Dexcool in the radiator. (Or if you live in very cold places, 1 to 1 ½ jugs of Dexcool)
-Fill the rest with water.
you do not need to use distilled water, clean hose water is just fine, just make sure your city water is clean and not total crap quality.

**Bleeding the system of air:
Start it up and let it run, radiator cap OFF, and let it warm up till the t-stat opens. I rapidly squeeze the upper and lower radiator hose like 20 times while its warming up to help move any air bubbles through the system and by the t-stat on the engine side. When the t-stat opens you’ll see the level drop as you squeeze it, its sucking the coolant through the system. You will also see the coolant start to flow in the radiator fill neck, once it starts to flow the level should drop down a lot, immediately top it off with coolant/water. Then the flow will stop when the t-stat closes. Wait one more time for the t-stat to open again and start to flow, if it drops down again top it off again. Do it a 3rd time if you want to make sure. I always massage the upper hose during the whole process to keep any air bubbles moving through. Always works like a charm. Just keep checking your temp gauge until the t-stat opens for the first time to make sure it’s not sitting there overheating from a trapped bubble. May take 10-15 minutes for the t-stat to open the first time.
If you do start to get hot while sitting there and the t-stat will not open…..you have an air bubble on the engine side of the t-stat. Shut the engine off and rapidly squeeze the upper and lower radiator hoses again. Then start the engine again and see if the t-stat will open. Sometimes you just have to work those hoses to move the air through. Even after it seems topped off after a couple cycles…check it the next time you have a cold engine…top off if needed.

.

Last edited by LS6427; Jul 21, 2011 at 04:35 PM.
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Old Jul 21, 2011 | 05:54 PM
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Cool Thanks for the input!
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