|
700/900 Series General Forum for the Volvo 740, 760, 780, 940, 960 & S/V90 cars |
Information |
|
Cooked B200FT Wentworth Estate 86kViews : 1444 Replies : 33Users Viewing This Thread : |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Jan 30th, 2024, 17:10 | #11 |
Premier Member
Last Online: Apr 21st, 2024 14:28
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Lenzie
|
Also,never ever let anyone else drive your Volvo's !! Thats why rubbish cars were invented
__________________
V70 D5 SE Geartronic 215bhp Saville Grey 2012MY 940 LPT Manual 1996 740 SE 1990 |
Jan 30th, 2024, 17:38 | #12 |
Junior Member
Last Online: Jan 30th, 2024 17:40
Join Date: May 2019
Location: Haywards Heath
|
You have my sympathy! This has happened to me twice now, and the good news is that I'm still driving the same car.
First time, I had no working temperature gauge and the engine got hot enough to melt the cambelt cover. The car was recovered to my driveway by the AA and wouldn't start, and I just assumed it had blown the head hasket. My local independent garage had a look at it, and they did skim the head and replace the head gasket but they reported that it had actually looked OK. The non-start seems to have been down to stuck rings, and it spent a week or so sitting in a corner at the garage with diesel in the bores before they managed to get it running again. Second time, the metal pipe from the back of the water pump failed on the motorway. Car still driveable after recovery, but overheating and pressurising the coolant, so clearly this time the gasket had gone. The same garage declared the original head too warped to recover (given that it had already been skimmed once), but Andy from this forum saved the day with a replacement head. All very depressing at the time, but I'm glad I didn't torch it at the roadside as I was briefly tempted to do. And it may be, as others have already suggested, that you'll have got away with it. With hindsight, I might have got away, the first time, with diesel down the bores and trying to start it up. Good luck, whichever course you choose! |
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to mister grimsdale For This Useful Post: |
Jan 30th, 2024, 17:54 | #13 |
VOC Member since 1986
Last Online: Today 12:38
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Leicestershire
|
See, Steve, there you go! I wouldn't have a clue about how to even start on replacing chimney pots or flaunching (Whatever that is!).
It's a shame you're not closer, I'd happily give you the loan of my V70 to tide you over. We have two other cars and none of them really get enough use as it is. Oh, and I realise 'griston64' was joking, but I'm more than happy for my Linda to drive 'my' V70 if it means I get to drive 'her' Saab 9000 V6 3.0! They're all really 'our' cars, since it all comes out of the same pot. Seriously, hope you get it sorted soonest. Linda's Mum lived well into her 90s; fiercely independent and a constant concern to us. She'd stand on a chair to change a light bulb regardless of the number of times I told her I would do it - we were less than half an hour away. I think it was Dickens who wrote about the Aged Parent Syndrome. Bloomin' old folks, eh. Regards, John.
__________________
Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana ..... |
Jan 30th, 2024, 20:14 | #14 |
Go redblock or go home
Last Online: Today 13:18
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: UK
|
I'd sort the leak out from the fact you said it is on the chassis rail the first place I'd look is the bottom of the header tank where the metal insert is as this rusts and swells up causing the plastic to crack.
Once sorted, fill it up and see if it runs, if it does then I'd be tempted to see how it goes, however if it got that hot I'd say the head is probably warped so it will need to come off to be skimmed (don't forget new stretch bolts, I know Volvo say they're reusable but from experience and for the sake of £30-£50 do it once and do it right) then it should be good to go hopefully. It's car chaos everywhere this week One guy at work his car cut out and wouldn't restart, an injector had stopped working properly so it was running lean on one cylinder and melted half the spark plug away. My focus has developed a bad knocking on the rear. A mate of mine had a tyre blowout on Friday and then Sunday night his auxiliary belt snapped on his Fiat Coupe 20V turbo, wrapped around the cambelt and took that out so the cylinder head is in need of a full rebuild now! Another guy at work has a 1.0 ecoboost focus and it has lived up to the ecoboom name and stripped cambelt teeth, blocking the oil pickup, starving the engine of oil completely grenading the engine, this is the third engine it will have had in 100k miles! Good luck with fixing it, let us know how you get on, I would offer to help but time is in short supply and my engine crane died with an engine and gearbox hanging off it. |
Jan 30th, 2024, 21:21 | #15 |
Premier Member
Last Online: Today 12:47
Join Date: Sep 2021
Location: Stowmarket
|
Cheers Luke, I was just about to PM you to enquire if by any chance you may have in your Aladdin’s Cave, a spare B200ft taking up valuable space, although I wouldn’t have thought you dabble in those more pedestrian motors😀😀
Leak source is identified already, absolutely pi##ing out of bottom hose/radiator joint, just didn’t have the will to investigate further if it’s the hose or radiator stub. I will sleep on it before checking it over tomorrow, and fingers crossed🤞 Cheers Steve |
The Following User Says Thank You to Steve 940 For This Useful Post: |
Jan 30th, 2024, 21:38 | #16 |
Premier Member
Last Online: Today 12:15
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Midlands.
|
Hope it's an easy fix and no lasting damage.
I have a 1996 940 LPT and one day expect the HG to go due to age/ different metals and 210,000 miles. I would have it done or have a go myself as like the car. Hope it works out for you. James |
Jan 30th, 2024, 21:45 | #17 |
Premier Member
Last Online: Yesterday 18:21
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Bristol
|
As above, hope it's an easy fix.
Even if it's replacement engine time, an experienced person with an engine crane ought to be able to swap a redblock in a day, I reckon. And B200 engines are probably easier to source and cheaper than the B230s these days Just go careful, redblocks aren't light. When I got the spare B230FT for my Volvo 340, the chap lifted it from the ground into the boot of my 740... no idea how! |
Jan 30th, 2024, 22:28 | #18 | |
Trader Volvo in my veins
Last Online: Apr 26th, 2024 23:53
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Anglesey
|
Quote:
Turn teh engine over by hand Try runnning it and see how it sounds You might find it just wants the coolant loss sorting, and probably a new head gasket and skim |
|
Jan 31st, 2024, 05:35 | #19 | |
Go redblock or go home
Last Online: Today 13:18
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: UK
|
Quote:
The fact it's got no gearbox means it's just a case of removing the wiring or seeing as it is in a scrapyard take a hacksaw and cut through the main loom at the bulkhead so you don't have to mess around unplugging it with the limited room available, cut/remove the heater hoses then remove the engine mount nuts and it should be ready to lift IIRC. I've already removed the downpipe (chucked it under the car as it was aftermarket junk) and I've got the radiator hoses so there's no hoses to deal with, I can't think of much else left on it holding it in. Just be aware it was leaking oil badly and looked like maintenance wasn't regular! It might just want all new seals and the pcv cleaning out then a decent service and be good to go, it was on 228202 miles so way higher than yours! |
|
Jan 31st, 2024, 05:38 | #20 |
Go redblock or go home
Last Online: Today 13:18
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: UK
|
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/126301583...mis&media=COPY
Comes with the M90 gearbox too! https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/156021172...mis&media=COPY Comes with the M46 gearbox |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|