white goop in coolant and a shot water pump

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by pkemble, Dec 6, 2004.

  1. pkemble

    pkemble Guest

    so i'm hoping this isn't the head gasket that went too, but i have a
    '88 CRX Si, and after replacing the thermostat it started overheating.
    the water pump had been showing signs of failure before - chirping, etc
    - and now it has gone. but the part that scares me is the white crap in
    the coolant, which must be engine oil. is there any other way for there
    to be oil in the coolant with a dead water pump, but without the head
    gasket failing? while troubleshooting, the exhaust was clear, and there
    was no blue smoke, so i think the combustion chambers are still sealed.
    thanks guys.

    -pete
     
    pkemble, Dec 6, 2004
    #1
  2. pkemble

    John Ings Guest

    Might be grease from disintegrating pump bearings.
    Coolant makes white smoke.
     
    John Ings, Dec 6, 2004
    #2
  3. pkemble

    pkemble Guest

    There's a lot of it. it's at the garage now waiting for a diagnosis to
    see whether the head is cracked or not, so i can't check for sure, but
    it was about 70-80% white goop in the coolant. thanks for the reply
    though.

    -Pete
     
    pkemble, Dec 6, 2004
    #3
  4. pkemble

    TeGGer® Guest


    Touch a drop on the tip of your tongue. Coolant is sweet, water is not.
    Wipe it off afterwards, don't swallow it.
     
    TeGGer®, Dec 6, 2004
    #4
  5. pkemble

    TomP Guest

    Sounds like galvanic corrosion
    (http://www.mcnallyinstitute.com/CDweb/g-html/g002.htm).

    Have your mechanic check for voltage in the radiator. Start the engine and
    let it fully warm up, fans should cycle two times min. Then with the
    engine and cooling fans running. Check for voltage between the radiator
    core (metal) and the negative (-) battery terminal. There should be zero
    volts.... If the voltage measured is over .003mV, you have voltage in the
    radiator. That voltage wants to go to ground. Since the radiator is
    (supposed to be) insulated from the rest of the car. The coolant becomes
    the path of least resistance.

    Cheers, Tp

    --
    Tp,

    -------- __o
    ----- -\<. -------- __o
    --- ( )/ ( ) ---- -\<.
    -------------------- ( )/ ( )
     
    TomP, Dec 11, 2004
    #5
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.