Look for a bleeder valve on the upper part of the cooling system. Is the water pump working properly? Did you flush the radiator? Did you have the heater control set to hot when burping the system?
Blown head gastet, radiator leaking, thermostat needs to be replaced Blown head gastet, radiator leaking, thermostat needs to be replaced
It's very possible.
Be care-full my radiator blew up and burnt me. I replaced Radiator, thermostat, and water pump. Timing belt is in the way so I replaced it too. OK Now
The thermostat on a 1993 Toyota Celica can be found by following the outlet radiator hose. The thermostat on these cars are located at the bottom of the radiator.
In general, engine thermostats can be found by following the LOWER radiator hose to where it attaches to the engine. The hose is typically attached to a fitting behind which is a gasket and the thermostat. The gasket needs to be replaced when the thermostat is replaced.
The thermostat connects to the top radiator hose on a 1996 Toyota Corolla. The bottom radiator hose connects to the water pump.
From your description it sounds as if the cooling system thermostat needs to be replaced. Sounds like it may be stuck in the open position which doesn't allow the coolant to warm up sufficiently to supply heat to the radiator.
first of all, do you have the right thermostat? ie: winter, summer. if so i would get the radiator checked, it may be getting pluged.
The thermostat is located on the cooling system on a 2003 Toyota Corolla. The thermostat can also be found by following the upper radiator hose.
To change a thermostat on a 1994 Toyota Camry V6, drain the radiator partially. Remove the upper hose assembly, unbolt the thermostat, and put the new one in place. Refill the radiator completely.
The thermostat in a 1996 Toyota Corolla DX is located in the top radiator hose. It is in the end that is closest to the engine.
my 1993 Toyota Camry radiator had a hole in it it was overheating. I replaced the radiator. The car is still overheating where is the thermostat located. First, drain your coolant from the radiator. Find your lower radiator hose and follow it to the metal housing. This is the thermostat housing. Remove the 2 nuts with a 10mm wrench. Remove the thermostat and replace with new one and new gasket. Re-install and re-fill your radiator with new coolant. Drive the car with heater running. Allow the engine to cool and top off the radiator. Add coolant to the reservoir to halfway between Full and Low.