if you've got some self amalgamating tape, then use it...
Ray. MMOC#47368. Forum moderator.
Jan 06: The Minor SII Africa adventure: http://www.minor-detour.com
Oct 06: back from Dresden with my Trabant 601 Kombi
Jan 07: back from a month thru North Africa (via Timbuktu) in a S3 Landy
June 07 - back from Zwickau Trabi Treffen
Aug 07 & Aug 08 - back from the Lands End to Orkney in 71 pickup
Sept 2010 - finally gave up breaking down in a SII Landy...
where to break down next?
2013... managed to seize my 1275 just by driving it round the block
if its a water pipe can you find a pipe that will fit in side it then cut it where its split poke a pipe in an put 2 juberlee clips on it
if its a vacume pipe for s servo them new washing machine pipes that are
thiner than the old ones are suposed to be the right size
rayofleamington wrote:if you've got some self amalgamating tape, then use it...
I used to have from a plumbers a pipe repair tape set which was basically a roll of rubber self-amalgamating tape and a roll of black clloth tape of the type that used to be used as insulating tape. The self-amalgamating is waterproof but weak while the cloth stuff bound tightly over the rubber stuff gives the strength.
I bow to the knowledge of the almighty rular. Only having 37 years experience as a mechanic, a lot of that time on Roadside repair/recovery, I now realise that I have been doing it wrong for all that time. I feel a career change coming on. What would the almighty rular suggest?
There is no logic to the idea that a pressure cap makes the engine run cooler. Yes - the water will boil at a higher temperature - so all the cap does is it delays the point where water evolves into steam - but the temperature rises just the same. The cap has no effect on that - it simply contains the water, and raises the eventual boiling point. Once water boils - it no longer circulates properly and can no longer cool the engine - the evolution into steam causes massive increase in pressure if the volume remains constant (Charles's Law) - it's how my steam loco works ! - and the cap then releases that pressure - with subsequent loss of coolant. Which is bad news all round really. So - effectively - the pressure cap simply helps the engine coolant to survive as a liquid over short periods of stress (hill climbing etc) and prevents coolant loss until it finally is forced to let go - to prevent the system from bursting eleswhere. The temperature of the coolant rises just the same - whether pressure cap in place or not - but with NO cap - it boils into steam at 100 C, if cap fitted the boiling is delayed until 110 maybe even 120 C !
You stick with steam engines. I will stick with the internal combustion engine. I know what I am doing, you know what you are doing.
It goes against all the laws of physics, but the car will run hotter (accordinging to the temp gauge).