I recently swapped heads on my 325i that broke a timing belt about a month ago. I filled her with coolant, bled the system, and the car drove great for a week.
Tonight when I was coming home from work, I noticed the temp needle was really wobbly and climbing towards the red. I tapped the cluster at a stoplight and the gauge suddenly went back to the exact middle. 500 feet down the road later, the needle made its way back into the red zone. Freaking the hell out, I pulled over, blasted the heat, and let her idle for a minute or two so she wouldn't heatsoak.
A minute or two later, I shut her off and set my hand on the valve cover. Toasty, but by no means scalding. Coolant hoses were warm to the touch, but again, not scalding. No steam or smoke anywhere in the engine bay, and nothing else seems out of the ordinary. I also slowly pulled the coolant cap off maybe 5 minutes after I turned the car off, and it came off willingly (no boiling, no steam, no hissing, nothing). I couldn't see the coolant level through the yellowed plastic, but my finger could feel warm coolant about an inch below the filler neck. I checked the oil and found... oil (no coolant-y milkshake).
Anyone else ever experience anything like this? How likely is it that this is a temp sender/gauge problem over an actual overheating problem?
I'll check the coolant level tomorrow, but I'm pretty sure I'm not low.
Tonight when I was coming home from work, I noticed the temp needle was really wobbly and climbing towards the red. I tapped the cluster at a stoplight and the gauge suddenly went back to the exact middle. 500 feet down the road later, the needle made its way back into the red zone. Freaking the hell out, I pulled over, blasted the heat, and let her idle for a minute or two so she wouldn't heatsoak.
A minute or two later, I shut her off and set my hand on the valve cover. Toasty, but by no means scalding. Coolant hoses were warm to the touch, but again, not scalding. No steam or smoke anywhere in the engine bay, and nothing else seems out of the ordinary. I also slowly pulled the coolant cap off maybe 5 minutes after I turned the car off, and it came off willingly (no boiling, no steam, no hissing, nothing). I couldn't see the coolant level through the yellowed plastic, but my finger could feel warm coolant about an inch below the filler neck. I checked the oil and found... oil (no coolant-y milkshake).
Anyone else ever experience anything like this? How likely is it that this is a temp sender/gauge problem over an actual overheating problem?
I'll check the coolant level tomorrow, but I'm pretty sure I'm not low.
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