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in order for the gauge to be pegged out like that your temp should be about 300 i think a sealed system boils at 260 so you wouldn’t have anything left nor a engine lol i would agree with the others check your wires and what not. is that a mechanical or electric gauge
Quote from: Irish_Alley on July 01, 2011, 11:57:52 pmin order for the gauge to be pegged out like that your temp should be about 300 i think a sealed system boils at 260 so you wouldn’t have anything left nor a engine lol i would agree with the others check your wires and what not. is that a mechanical or electric gaugeNot trying to be argumentative, your theory is correct when reading water. A pressurized system raises a liquid's boiling point. But air pockets in a cooling system are steam, and can be superheated (heat added to a vapor after the change of state). A reading like that is not representative of the true engine temp, but the temp of said steam pocket only. Let the water level drop in a system to the point that the sensor reads an air/steam pocket, and readings like that are not impossible to see. I just wanted to throw that out there as a possibility, because I have seen it. When my truck did it, it wouldn't sit at a max reading for very long, but it scared me to death to look down and see my temp gauge pegged out for a few seconds, or more, until it got a shot of water across the sending unit. A stop at the very next station, and a top-off of water brought everything back to where it was supposed to be, and no permanent damage resulted. Of course, a water pump and t-stat change followed closely behind. All that said, I agree with everyone, including you, it's likely an electrical issue.