... I'm getting married on the 31st so I'm deffinately taking my time because my wife is a stressed out nuclear bomb and not enjoyable company right now lol...
If my wife found out I was getting married at the end of the month, I'm sure that she would be beyond upset with me.
The degas is simple, but the hardest part of replacing the degas is detaching and re-attaching the lower hose (IMO). Everything else took me less than 30 mins.
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With some more cursing and frustration, I got it out. Doesn't appear to have visible cracks, nor' did any of my coolant plastics, so I'm hoping replacing all of this stuff still fixes my overheating problem. But if it doesn't, atleast they're all replaced.
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I can't remember what this wire bolts to. Its behind the intake manifold and has a yellow tag on it that says 3w4t 19a095 and says AC on it. One end of it is bolted to the metal underneath the plastic Window wiper shroud, and its about 10" to 12" long. I thought it bolted to the wiring harness junction behind the intake manifold, but can't remember if it could have bolted to the rear intake manifold long 10mm bolt or what. Urgent hell please, thablack
I think that it does go on one of the intake manifold bolts. I can run and check im working on mine at the moment.
For future reference...
Use hose pliers to twist the hose to break it loose. If that doesn't work, very carefully use a box cutter to slice the hose open where it is connected. You have to be very careful because it is easy to cut a groove into the aluminum tube. Such a groove would probably cause the hose connection to leak.
This is great. I was following the bleedout procedure by removing engine fill cap, open heater air bleed, and continually fill degas bottle until coolant equalizes... Only to have the coolant gush out of my engine fill ALL OVER MY BRAND NEW SERPENTINE BELT. Awesome.