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Chances are, you have a leak somewhere. You can check your hoses and cooling system components for leaks, and repair them as needed. You can either do a visual inspection, or do the dye and blacklight test. You may also not be changing your coolant out often enough. In the cooling cycle, coolant will change from liquid to vapor and back, with the inevitable result being that some of it will evaporate over time. Coolant doesn't last forever - it does burn out over time, and will need replacement.
most likely is do to air being traped in coolant system after replacement . and the air is being purged out as the engine warms up to operating temp ..
That is were the coolant goes when it expands. Sounds like coolant isn't circulating or it is being forced out of the system.
Let the engine cool off after being run.The cooling system pressure is a result of the coolant being heated - once the heat dissipates, so will the pressure, making it safe to remove the top of the coolant reservoir.
Low coolant level, air in the cooling system. Low coolant level or a faulty rad cap allowing air to be sucked into the system when it should be sucking in coolant from the overflow bottle.
There is no question that a human being cannot live without a nervous system.
The radiator cap will get hot if the coolant is near the cap. Caution should always be taken when removing it to avoid being burned. The maximum coolant level is below the cap, but the cap pressurizes the system. Removing it too quickly without allowing the pressure out can result in serious injury.
it turns into a gas
No,you should never add coolant to a running car.Or even a hot one for that matter.They are a closed system,you risk being burned badly byv doing so.
In order to evaporate, energy has to be added to the system, so there will be energy transfer from the surroundings into the material being evaporated, with the effect of cooling the surroundings.
Water works wonders. It is able to evaporate from liquid form when it is getting warm. It is able to evaporate from liquid form when being cold. It is able to evaporate directly from even Ice.
No. No modern engine (and by modern, I mean any of the computer-controlled engines in use since for the last couple of decades) should be run without a thermostat. The computer senses many different conditions, one of them being coolant temperature, and the engine will not run at its proper efficiency if the coolant temperature is not being properly regulated.