Car gushing coolant after a light scrape on a driveway... ideas?

Magicboy2

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 14, 2001
Posts
769
Reaction score
2
Location
Philadelphia, PA
So yesterday I was turning my '94 around to pull out of a development. I slowly pulled nose-first into a driveway to do a three point turn. The driveway had a bit of a slope to the bottom of it, and the front scraped a little as I pulled into it. No big deal, I thought, light fascia scrapes happen all the time.

For an unrelated reason, I parked the car immediately after turning it around. A few minutes later, someone pointed out a huge green puddle forming under the car. An investigation of the ground revealed that the leak started immediately at the high spot on the driveway, and was not present as I pulled into said driveway. Furthermore, a quick inspection of the engine compartment did not reveal anything amiss there.

This was not a slow leak; the puddle was pretty huge within half an hour. As this was not at my house and the car is still there, I don't have access to check it out.

Is there a drain plug in the front of the car for coolant that I might have ripped off? Any hoses hanging around that low? I'm thinking I'll just have the car towed to the closest Dodge dealership around there, but if it was something simple....

Thanks in advance for any ideas.
 

99 R/T 10

Enthusiast
Joined
Jun 4, 2001
Posts
10,314
Reaction score
0
Location
Enterprise, AL USA
There is a screw pointing towards the overflow bottle on the bottom of the front facia. When you scraped, it probably punctured the bottle and is now leaking.
 

LifeIsGood

Enthusiast
Joined
Jun 1, 2008
Posts
2,272
Reaction score
4
Location
Viper Lane, Arizona
Here is a picture of my GEN II coolant overflow bottle.

It is attached to the front right wheel well and is up off the bottom of the fascia. Do the GEN I's sit down on the bottom?


You must be registered for see images
 
Last edited:

AZTVR

Enthusiast
Joined
Aug 28, 2005
Posts
3,043
Reaction score
7
Location
Chandler AZ
Here is a picture of my GEN II coolant overlfow bottle.

It is attached to the front right wheel well and is up off the bottom of the fascia.

I guarantee that the bottle is close enough on a Gen II that it can be punctured, given the length and sharpness of the fascia screw ! I recommend any reader here to remove that screw and cut it shorter ! Easy insurance against having to go through the hassle of removing the bumper cover !
 

RTTTTed

Viper Owner
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Posts
6,438
Reaction score
0
I guarantee that the bottle is close enough on a Gen II that it can be punctured, given the length and sharpness of the fascia screw ! I recommend any reader here to remove that screw and cut it shorter ! Easy insurance against having to go through the hassle of removing the bumper cover !

Preventative maintenance is how I'd describe that job. I'm all for little jobs that make or might make a huge difference. I'll be doing the bolt shortening before re-attaching my fresh painted front fascia. Great picture Georgedog!

Ted
 
Last edited:

RevHeat

Viper Owner
Joined
Jan 8, 2006
Posts
804
Reaction score
1
Location
San Antonio, Texas
I guarantee that the bottle is close enough on a Gen II that it can be punctured, given the length and sharpness of the fascia screw ! I recommend any reader here to remove that screw and cut it shorter ! Easy insurance against having to go through the hassle of removing the bumper cover !

I just looked (96 GTS) and you would have to really be messing with a big sloop to hit that screw. Seems to me if you do hit that screw that you will have more problems to worry about then just the bottle.

Rev
 
Last edited:
OP
OP
M

Magicboy2

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 14, 2001
Posts
769
Reaction score
2
Location
Philadelphia, PA
Thanks guys for the responses. As this all went down about two hours away from home and the car is still down there, I don't have access to tools or the like, so I'm having it towed to the local dealer with a Viper tech for them to patch it up.
 

Jack B

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 5, 2000
Posts
3,484
Reaction score
0
Location
NE Ohio
I fixed a Gen 1 that had the fascia screw forced into the bottle. I used a large sheet metal screw and some JB Weld.
 

Rainer

Viper Owner
Joined
Apr 1, 2007
Posts
82
Reaction score
0
Location
Austria / Europe
here you can see the "bad screw"

picture.php

just make it a little bit shorter and flat on the top....

Rainer

______________________________________
2002 RT10 graphite grey
Mods: K+N Filter, Smooth Tubes, Belanger Headers, Hi-Flow Cats, Corsa 3", light Flywheel, Startech suspension, stainless brakelines, EBC discs+pads, brake cooling tubes
 

93rt10

Enthusiast
Joined
Jun 26, 2009
Posts
21
Reaction score
0
Great thread...Is the stock piece a flat tipped bolt or pointed screw? (My Viper is an early 93). Rainer is your picture stock or after cutting said bolt/screw?
 
OP
OP
M

Magicboy2

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 14, 2001
Posts
769
Reaction score
2
Location
Philadelphia, PA
So apparently it was the thermostat housing?? Realize that's a common problem in Gen Is, but I have no idea how an impact on a driveway could have jarred that loose (there was literally zero leaking before), but that's what the Viper tech said. And since removing the whole manifold takes time, it was an $800 repair at the dealer. :(
 

RTTTTed

Viper Owner
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Posts
6,438
Reaction score
0
"So apparently it was the thermostat housing?? Realize that's a common problem in Gen Is, but I have no idea how an impact on a driveway could have jarred that loose "

Sorry, your T-stat housing wasn't bolted down? Mechanic said it was jarred loose? What?

So there must have been $400 for the tow included in the repair cost?

Ted
 

Latest posts

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
153,218
Posts
1,682,059
Members
17,713
Latest member
webironmongery
Top