Corrosion. No offense to
@fast 99. I've seen more on aluminum than brass. Types of anti-freeze, no anti-freeze? I don't know.
A radiator shop will pressure test it to find the leak, tell you whether or not it is repairable; if so they can boil it, rod it out, fix the leak, pressure test it again and paint it.
Corrosion. No offense to
@fast 99. I've seen more on aluminum than brass. Types of anti-freeze, no anti-freeze? I don't know.
A radiator shop will pressure test it to find the leak, tell you whether or not it is repairable; if so they can boil it, rod it out, fix the leak, pressure test it again and paint it.
Aluminum radiators will destroy themselves if they become a battery, yes they do this. Put a positive lead from a multimeter into the radiator and ground the negative lead to battery. Check for voltage,engine running,loads on, headlights,heater blower etc. Shouldn't be any, I am not sure if the antifreeze becomes acidic or not but stands to reason it would. Anyway it's something to check. They also like to have a sacrificial rod in them,just like a water heater,so the sacrificial rod gets eaten instead of the radiator. Look up water heater sacrificial rod and read about it,it's usually the difference in a longer warrantied water heater,2 sacrificial rods instead of one. Thanks for reminding me I should probably change mine as maintenance.