Heater not blowing hot enough, need some hints.
#12
It is a reverse thread, so righty loosy, lefty tighty. I had success on a old Ford Bronco II with making a tool out of an old hack saw frame, drilled a couple holes to hold the old pump, bolted it to the frame and a got a BFR ( Big F'n wrench).
Another option would be if any of your local parts stores have a lone a tool program......
#13
If it's the pump it could be just a break in thing or a bad pump. Was it a remanufactured pump? Keep an ear out and if it gets worse I'd suspect a bad pump. Save your receipts because it may go.
#14
Is it the belt or the pump? If its the belt it may just be a little grease on something on it.
If it's the pump it could be just a break in thing or a bad pump. Was it a remanufactured pump? Keep an ear out and if it gets worse I'd suspect a bad pump. Save your receipts because it may go.
If it's the pump it could be just a break in thing or a bad pump. Was it a remanufactured pump? Keep an ear out and if it gets worse I'd suspect a bad pump. Save your receipts because it may go.
#16
Hope its all worked out now.
#17
Problem solved
In my original post, the garage indicated that it was the water pump causing my luke warm heat. I thought they were nuts but changed the water pump anyway. While doing so, I discovered that there was a coolant leak coming from between the block and the timing chain cover gasket. I changed that gasket as well. My truck had also been using about a quart of oil per 2500 miles and couldn't figure out where it was going. I found out that there was a service bulletin out for the intake manifold/plenum gasket. So, I went ahead and changed that too. Two days of work and solved two out of three issues...lol, still just luke warm heat. I took the truck back to the shop this morning and told them to do what I wanted done in the first place, power flush the heater core. They did just that and what do you know...I have strong heat again!!
I don't feel so bad doing all the work I did because I know that my oil consumption problem is solved and so is the coolant leak. A quick check to see if a flush will cure your issue; start your truck and get it to operating temperature. There are two coolant lines that run to the firewall for the heater core. Feel each one of those hoses at approximately their mid point. If one is hot and the other is cool, there is a blockage in the heater core. Take it to someone you trust and have them perform a power flush of the cooling system. The mechanic said there was a lot of gook that came out of mine.
Good luck and hope this helped.
I don't feel so bad doing all the work I did because I know that my oil consumption problem is solved and so is the coolant leak. A quick check to see if a flush will cure your issue; start your truck and get it to operating temperature. There are two coolant lines that run to the firewall for the heater core. Feel each one of those hoses at approximately their mid point. If one is hot and the other is cool, there is a blockage in the heater core. Take it to someone you trust and have them perform a power flush of the cooling system. The mechanic said there was a lot of gook that came out of mine.
Good luck and hope this helped.