naturist wrote:
Well, the new reservoir and cap seem to still have a problem.
The cooling system does indeed blow over a slug of coolant into the secondary catch tank when it heats up. But it stays pressurized when it cools and doesn't suck the coolant BACK into the main chamber. I'm going to apply the ole turkey baster to it and manually return the coolant from the secondary tank to the main tank. It appears to my eye that the amount in the secondary tank is just about equal to what I need to return the primary chamber to the full-when-cold mark.
There is no sign of coolant in the oil, nor any oil in the coolant. There also does not appear to be any coolant missing, it just isn't making the trip back to the primary tank when it cools. As though a slug of gas of some sort is making its way into the cooling system.
A blown head gasket and I would suspect the oil/coolant mixing to take place. Especially since it seems to remain pressurized when cold. If there were a leak between coolant and cylinder, such that compression blew a little air into the coolant, I'd expect the coolant to leak back into the cylinder, thence into the oil, or at least disappearing into the exhaust, and I don't see signs of either.
Any suggestions about where to look for a one-way air-in sort of leak?
Not necessarily. This is exactly what mine was doing w/ a warped head/blown head gasket. I did exactly what you did too. First tried a new cap, then new tank. Then figured out it was over-pressurizing and blowing out the overflow. Over time it would blow more and more coolant out the overflow until my wife would get a low-coolant light after about 25 miles from a full tank.
Dealer tested the coolant and oil and didn't detect coolant in the oil or exhaust gas in the overflow tank. So they initially thought the problem was the t-stat. Only after that was eliminated and reading about racer's trouble (follow the link in my post up-thread) did we pull the head and measure it.
Basically there is a ton of pressure from the exhaust side pushing past the head gasket but there's fairly little pushing the other way so the head gasket can keep the water out, it just can't keep the exhaust gas in.