dgrinnan Posted December 1, 2021 Report Posted December 1, 2021 (edited) Does anyone know what this tube is for and what it connects to at the other end and where the other end might be? I am working to get the engine ready to try and start it. I have found a lot of missing items under the hood. No voltage regulator. Some missing wiring. Heater hoses missing. No fuel line. I can figure out the wiring and heater hoses but the small tube coming out of the cooling system is a mystery. See picture. Edited December 1, 2021 by dgrinnan Quote
Young Ed Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 I've worked on a few W series trucks and I've never seen that before. Can't imagine what it would be for either. Quote
Merle Coggins Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 It looks like there are adapter housings under the thermostat and water pump connector. I wonder if that's part of an aftermarket accessory of some kind. I've never seen anything like that. You could probably take out both pieces and have a 'normal' engine. Quote
dgrinnan Posted December 2, 2021 Author Report Posted December 2, 2021 That is a good possibility. There is no heater in my truck either. It might have been removed during the restoration and lost by the estate like a lot of missing parts on my truck. If I can't find something the water line would run to I will put a plug in it. Until I get a heater I will need to loop my heater hoses back to the input. Quote
Merle Coggins Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 If you don't have a heater it's best to cap off the heater ports on the engine. Normally the heater supply comes out of the back corner of the head. I can't see what's there in your picture as it's too dark in that corner. The heater return would be plumbed into that plug at the top of your thermostat to water pump housing. (above the tube in question) Quote
dgrinnan Posted December 2, 2021 Author Report Posted December 2, 2021 It must have had some sort of strange setup. The heater return is on the back side of the flange where the radiator hose attaches. If you look close where I added another arrow you can see another adapter is between the flange and the block with a heater hose inlet/outlet. Quote
61spit Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 Is it a hollow tube or a solid shaft that could be a handle to a valve? Quote
dgrinnan Posted December 2, 2021 Author Report Posted December 2, 2021 (edited) You are right. It is a shut off valve. I had to go take a second look. Edited December 2, 2021 by dgrinnan Quote
dgrinnan Posted December 2, 2021 Author Report Posted December 2, 2021 the inlet at the back corner of the engine is plugged. Mystery sort of solved. Not sure why there are two outlet(s)/inlets(s) at the same place. Quote
Merle Coggins Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 Interesting... Why would one wish to shut off the thermostat bypass? And the second adapter appears to be below the thermostat, which would be hot coolant under pressure, similar to the port at the rear of the head. Was it supposed to get more coolant flow through the heater, in effect making the heater the thermostat bypass circuit with the valve closed? Can anyone find this option in a W-Series parts catalog? Quote
Merle Coggins Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 For now you could just cap off that port below the thermostat so that you can fill the system and run the engine. Quote
Sniper Posted December 2, 2021 Report Posted December 2, 2021 I wonder if that is some sort of military cold weather heater setup? Quote
dgrinnan Posted December 2, 2021 Author Report Posted December 2, 2021 (edited) The cap at the rear of the engine does appear as if it was a recent change. It looks like there is teflon tape on the plug threads and the plug is not the same silver as the rest of the engine. It is just bare metal. Edited December 2, 2021 by dgrinnan Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.