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  # 1  
Old 22-12-15, 04:44
Monolith Monolith is offline
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Help with examining Coolant flow (XT660z)

Hi Folks,

Yesterday I noticed the Water Coolant warning indicator come on (red) while riding around town. approximately 5 mins the warning indicator light turned off.

Today I removed the housing protecting the coolant header tank: the levels seem okay (full) and the colour of the coolant matches that of the refill bottle I have.

I started up the bike and left it running for about 5 mins with the header tank cap off. The heat radiating from the engine, coolant hoses and radiator was hot, but i was unable to see any movement (flow) in the header tank, as one would see with a Cars' Header tank.

Is there any possibility to produce the effect of water flowing, so as to see if there is any fault or obstruction and to see if coolant is circulating through the system properly?

Could there be an Air bubble or some pump not working?

Thanks in advance.

Kind regards,
  # 2  
Old 22-12-15, 09:47
Pleiades Pleiades is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: North Norfolk
Posts: 5,320
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
Hi Folks,

Yesterday I noticed the Water Coolant warning indicator come on (red) while riding around town. approximately 5 mins the warning indicator light turned off.

Today I removed the housing protecting the coolant header tank: the levels seem okay (full) and the colour of the coolant matches that of the refill bottle I have.

I started up the bike and left it running for about 5 mins with the header tank cap off. The heat radiating from the engine, coolant hoses and radiator was hot, but i was unable to see any movement (flow) in the header tank, as one would see with a Cars' Header tank.

Is there any possibility to produce the effect of water flowing, so as to see if there is any fault or obstruction and to see if coolant is circulating through the system properly?

Could there be an Air bubble or some pump not working?

Thanks in advance.

Kind regards,
Firstly, there is no coolant flow in the expansion tank on the XT�s cooling system. It is not really a header tank at all (as it sits below the coolant level) and it is not within the pressurised part of the cooling system (and why it only has a rubber bung). It is literally there just to collect the overflow of coolant forced out when the radiator cap�s valve opens under pressure due to the volume of coolant expanding when the engine gets up to normal operating temperature. When the engine cools a vacuum is created in the pressurised part of the system sucking back the same amount of coolant that was expelled when the bike reached operating temperature. The level in the expansion tank will rise on a warm engine and fall back when cold. It should always return to the same level on a cold engine if there are no leaks in the system and the radiator cap is working properly.

This is why you should really check the coolant level in the radiator; don�t rely on the level in the expansion tank. Theoretically the expansion tank could appear full, but there may be a big air gap at the top of the radiator. Remember it�s not a header tank; what you put in the tank isn�t going to fill the radiator. Unscrew the rad cap and check the level is up to the neck. It�s quite tricky to do on a Z as the tank is very close but I find a small mirror helps to get a look inside the radiator filler neck.

Your problem could well be a radiator cap that has a weak spring, bad seal or is opening too early and not holding pressure. It should maintain a system pressure of 1.2bar (17psi). If it doesn�t, then the coolant temperature will rise much more quickly than normal and the coolant will boil at close to 100C, rather than nearer 115C when under pressure. This may explain why the temperature warning lamp is coming on early. There have been a lot of documented problems with weak or failed radiator caps on XTs, so I�d have a look here next (after having checked the coolant level in the rad.) Yamaha changed the cap design in 2010, so if you have an earlier one � be a little suspicious.

Also check the radiator fins are free from crud and that the fan is operating correctly � it should be cutting in before the temperature warning light does.

Of course all the above suggestions are based on the fact you have no obvious physical coolant leaks (as you didn�t mention any) and there is no coolant dripping out of the tell-tale on the base of the water pump housing?
  # 3  
Old 22-12-15, 11:43
Monolith Monolith is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Western Australia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pleiades View Post
Firstly, there is no coolant flow in the expansion tank on the XT�s cooling system. It is not really a header tank at all (as it sits below the coolant level) and it is not within the pressurised part of the cooling system (and why it only has a rubber bung). It is literally there just to collect the overflow of coolant forced out when the radiator cap�s valve opens under pressure due to the volume of coolant expanding when the engine gets up to normal operating temperature. When the engine cools a vacuum is created in the pressurised part of the system sucking back the same amount of coolant that was expelled when the bike reached operating temperature. The level in the expansion tank will rise on a warm engine and fall back when cold. It should always return to the same level on a cold engine if there are no leaks in the system and the radiator cap is working properly.

This is why you should really check the coolant level in the radiator; don�t rely on the level in the expansion tank. Theoretically the expansion tank could appear full, but there may be a big air gap at the top of the radiator. Remember it�s not a header tank; what you put in the tank isn�t going to fill the radiator. Unscrew the rad cap and check the level is up to the neck. It�s quite tricky to do on a Z as the tank is very close but I find a small mirror helps to get a look inside the radiator filler neck.

Your problem could well be a radiator cap that has a weak spring, bad seal or is opening too early and not holding pressure. It should maintain a system pressure of 1.2bar (17psi). If it doesn�t, then the coolant temperature will rise much more quickly than normal and the coolant will boil at close to 100C, rather than nearer 115C when under pressure. This may explain why the temperature warning lamp is coming on early. There have been a lot of documented problems with weak or failed radiator caps on XTs, so I�d have a look here next (after having checked the coolant level in the rad.) Yamaha changed the cap design in 2010, so if you have an earlier one � be a little suspicious.

Also check the radiator fins are free from crud and that the fan is operating correctly � it should be cutting in before the temperature warning light does.

Of course all the above suggestions are based on the fact you have no obvious physical coolant leaks (as you didn�t mention any) and there is no coolant dripping out of the tell-tale on the base of the water pump housing?
Thank you for your response,

There does not seem to be any leaks detectable. So, it seems from your perspective, that I will need to examine further up the system to the radiator itself.

i was of the opinion (unlearned in the field of Motorbike Mechanics) that the coolant 'reservoir' was where you would top up the coolant and check the levels, and from that point the coolant would circulate through the system.

will update shortly.

thanks.
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  # 4  
Old 22-12-15, 11:59
Monolith Monolith is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Western Australia
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Update:

I add approximately 75ml which overflowed the radiator.
So that is an indication there is no leak.

I have had the bike for about 2.5yrs and no problems.
I have a workshop service manual for it, but don't see any solutions.

Could it be a false-positive, due to a temporal fault with a sensor?
or is their further testing recommended?

Any suggest a reliable meter monitor to watch the temperatures of critical systems, some thing that isn't took expensive

Thank you folks, much appreciated.
  # 5  
Old 22-12-15, 15:06
Pleiades Pleiades is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: North Norfolk
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
There does not seem to be any leaks detectable. So, it seems from your perspective, that I will need to examine further up the system to the radiator itself.
Especially the cap.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
i was of the opinion (unlearned in the field of Motorbike Mechanics) that the coolant 'reservoir' was where you would top up the coolant and check the levels, and from that point the coolant would circulate through the system.
Only if the “high” mark on the expansion tank is above the highest point of the cooling system. On an XT it is not. The coolant can only be expelled into or drawn through from the expansion tank by a vacuum and only if the coolant level in the radiator is at or above the overflow pipe/valve which the cap controls. If there is any air in the pressurised part of the cooling system then that air will compress like a spring allowing the coolant to expand without creating any fluid pressure in the system and nothing will enter or leave the expansion tank (the air pocket will do its job instead).

Quote:
Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
Could it be a false-positive, due to a temporal fault with a sensor?
or is their further testing recommended?

Any suggest a reliable meter monitor to watch the temperatures of critical systems, some thing that isn't took expensive
If you are sure the rad cap is good and the levels are all correct then it might be worth checking the temperature sensor. This can be done by plugging the bike into a diagnostic tool or removing it and checking its resistance suspended in a pan of water gently raised in temperature up to 100C and cross referenced against a thermometer.



An alternative would be to fit a temperature gauge which would also tell you what’s going on.

I fitted a KOSO temperature gauge to monitor what’s going on as I have a general mistrust of warning lights as they often only ever tell you anything useful when it’s too late.



It fits in the top hose like this:

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