78 GMC Jimmy
1/2 ton status
My SBC 400 has a dirty cooling system due to the previous owner using WAY too much "stop leak" in the cooling system.
I already flushed it thoroughly once before. I got about 3 inches of stop leak grit in the bottom of a 5 gallon bucket. Inside the radiator hose was a thick layer of brown sludge. I put radiator flush in there and drove it for a day, and then flushed the whole system with a garden hoes (thermostat out), then flushed with distilled water and then added antifreeze.
That, combined with a 160 thermostat solved the per-ignition problem that would not allow the engine to start / cranks very slowly before starting when the engine was hot. Cylinders overheating due to being insulated with crud?
So everything was fine until the warmer weather showed up. Now the temp gauge is climbing higher than it used to, and the engine is very difficult to start until it cools off. Once it cools off, it starts extremely well.
I have already hose flushed it again with the thermostat out, but there is still plenty of crud in the cooling system. I wish I could send plastic pellets through the system to scrub the whole system, but thats not an option of course. So..... Baking soda? Anyone ever try this before? Online it says the ratio would work out to two cups of baking soda, run it till its hot, and then flush again? Maybe try this a few times in a row?
Thoughts on the baking soda idea?
I already flushed it thoroughly once before. I got about 3 inches of stop leak grit in the bottom of a 5 gallon bucket. Inside the radiator hose was a thick layer of brown sludge. I put radiator flush in there and drove it for a day, and then flushed the whole system with a garden hoes (thermostat out), then flushed with distilled water and then added antifreeze.
That, combined with a 160 thermostat solved the per-ignition problem that would not allow the engine to start / cranks very slowly before starting when the engine was hot. Cylinders overheating due to being insulated with crud?
So everything was fine until the warmer weather showed up. Now the temp gauge is climbing higher than it used to, and the engine is very difficult to start until it cools off. Once it cools off, it starts extremely well.
I have already hose flushed it again with the thermostat out, but there is still plenty of crud in the cooling system. I wish I could send plastic pellets through the system to scrub the whole system, but thats not an option of course. So..... Baking soda? Anyone ever try this before? Online it says the ratio would work out to two cups of baking soda, run it till its hot, and then flush again? Maybe try this a few times in a row?
Thoughts on the baking soda idea?