An oil coolant?æ hose is a tube or pipe that allows engine oil to circulate via the radiator in order to cool down. Without an oil coolant hose, oil will get to hot to operate efficiently.
It is an engine oil coolant hose. It runs to the oil cooler, which is a dual processing unit. Oil flows through one side, and antifreezeengine coolant flows through the other.. The hose you are talking about carried antifreeze to the cooler, and then to the engine. My car has a 4" long hose 1/4" ID in that location and it is a drain for coolant leaks in the heater core [like a tiny radiator].
It is the hose that carries your oil to the radiator or away from it, to be cooled. Oil gets very hot, and must cool to maintain efficiency. These are the thinner metal hoses running to your radiator into the sides. If your looking at the car from the front, the oil hoses are on the right. The ones on the left are transmission fluid coolant hoses.
drain out coolant to a point were hose is clear, remove hose then replace,add coolant to bring up to normal level...will loose a bit of coolant but not much!!
Dealer item only, Sorry,,,,,,, Or salvage yard
Remove the oil pan drain plug to drain the oil. Remove the lower radiator hose to drain the coolant.
Drain the coolant, unclamp the old hose, remove the old hose, install the new hose, clamp the new hose in, fill up the coolant.
Begin by removing the bottom radiator hose. Allow the old coolant to drain out. Replace the hose to its original position. Fill the radiator with new coolant.
This is just another coolant hose, they fail because:The bypass is usually in a spot that gets oil leaks and this will cause it to fail earlyAll cooling hoses get old and tired
All the parts making up a cooling system for the oil in an engine. Small radiator in the front, a hose or line to and from that radiator to a plate or box at which the oil filter will be attached. Not many cars have them.
On a Dodge Neon, the coolant bypass hose is in the engine compartment. It is under the alternator and AC compressor. Both have to be removed before you will see the hose.
This sounds like bad news. The coolant could be leaking into your engine and mixing with the engine oil, then cooking off. A simple test can tell if there's water in your oil.
If there is coolant on the top radiator hose, it may be coming from the hose itself. It may have a hole or cut in it where coolant is spraying out when the car heats up. If there's no hole in the hose, check to see if the clamp needs to be tightened up.