NEW IDEA 2 Make BEADS IN TUBING - AIR HAMMER Profiling TOOL - COE Ramp Truck EP-33

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
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    On this Episode of Make It Kustom, we solve the cooling issue by making a new tool!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 310

  • @robertsmit3007
    @robertsmit3007 Місяць тому +13

    Hello Karl, love your channel
    My name is Rob Smit and I have a small fabrication shop in the Central Tablelands in NSW Australia
    I have built a lot of cooling systems over the years and and if you are interested here is my observation of your new truck system. When you put a larger core radiator on that is 3,4 or five core radiator you new the horsepower behind an engine driven fan. Electric fans up against the core or on a shroud sealed to the radiator core if used on a thick core cannot achieve their top speed as they do not have the kilowatts/horsepower to get to their rated rpm. An engine driven fan will use typically around 20 horsepower at high rpm.
    For the electric fans to work use a single or two core radiator. Check for yourself if you pull the fans just back a little they move heaps of air..
    Attach the fans to a single or twin core they still will move heaps of air but put it behind a five core and the air moved is dramatically reduced.
    Hope my 10 cents helps a little.
    Again I love your channel you are living my dream thankyou for the fabulous content I love it
    Regards Rob Smit

  • @ericmorriscompany9648
    @ericmorriscompany9648 Місяць тому +9

    Home built by Jeff was having cooling issues. He finally solved it by baffling the radiator header tanks to force the coolant to travel farther through the radiator. Instead of going directly from one tank straight across to the other, the coolant passed back and forth. More dwell time in the rad gives the coolant more time to shed heat and it solved the issue.

    • @donaldhalls2189
      @donaldhalls2189 Місяць тому

      That is why when I take the thermostat out I put the restriction plate back in, ( cut the centre out ) ,glad it got sorted, thanks for sharing, all the best to you and your loved ones

  • @danielstickney2400
    @danielstickney2400 Місяць тому +5

    As someone who doesn't have the money or space for CNC anything or the patience to learn CAD software I greatly appreciate it when you focus on the scab it together, trim it to fit approach.

  • @guyfranks4354
    @guyfranks4354 Місяць тому +7

    You could keep the engine operating in the power band by down shifting the transmission. If you have a 5 speed drop into 3rd gear going up and down steep hills at less than 40kmh. It should help with engine cooling and save your brakes going down hill. Brakes should be used moderately on down grades and then released and allow the speed to increase slightly before repeating. If applied continously on long down grades they WILL fade out and you will be wishing for a runaway escape lane to be nearby. I'm a retired CDL Driver with 28 years experience. I hope this is helpful. I enjoy your videos and I await the next one.

  • @Huskiedrive361
    @Huskiedrive361 Місяць тому +10

    The steam line should always be connected to the highest point of the radiator tank to allow for air during filling and steam during operation to purge from system. Sounds like you were fighting a partial air lock in the heads since they were higher. Always a good idea to replace the water pump as you did. Cheap insurance. Glad you're making progress. Love the channel!

  • @chrishunter8114
    @chrishunter8114 Місяць тому +6

    Evening sir, as an old pipe fitter/maintenance guy, for smaller NPT threads try a product called SWAK by Swagelok. Anaerobic pipe thread sealant. Very effective, but not dirt cheap. Excellent for stainless fittings

    • @francisrampen9099
      @francisrampen9099 Місяць тому

      I used to go through tubes of SWAK every week - great stuff . Loctite PST 565 is pretty much the same thing, cheaper and available everywhere. Whatever you find you never have to worry about winding it on the right way or have bits of teflon floating through the system. ❤

  • @JPSTREETPERFORMANCE
    @JPSTREETPERFORMANCE Місяць тому +12

    There is a plug in the rear of the opposite head you can use for a secondary coolant temp port, or use the factory LS temp sensor output from the ECU to a gauge with the right resistance. I have seen trouble with a top mounted coolant temp sensor when air is present in the system and the gauge fluctuates as you are describing under a load. One other subscriber mentioned vacuuming down the cooling system (air-lift) that is definitely recommended if you have the ability/tool. You are also on the right Track by moving the steam pipe back to the highest point in the system.

  • @nzsaltflatsracer8054
    @nzsaltflatsracer8054 Місяць тому +3

    I built a tubing bead tool years ago that I've used on tubing all the way up to 4" turbo pipes. It's three pieces of curved 1/4" round bar welded to vice grips. Make a line on the pipe to follow, adjust the vice grips for depth & crimp on. It also works as a brake hose crimp tool when doing brakes. ps.. I see a lot of gaps around that radiator installation that will allow the hot air to go back around for another pass through the core. A simple four sided diffuser duct from the front of the radiator to the front of the cab will ensure only ambient air will go through the core. When the air temp going through the core is the same as core temp you have no heat exchange!

  • @steventwiddy3402
    @steventwiddy3402 29 днів тому +1

    Man I kind of do what you do for a living, 10 hours a day but I never get tired of watching your videos…..I learn a lot of things that makes me a better artisan and I can pass that along to my younger guys and help them to be better……thanks for all you do my friend
    Hey by the way, grind that mushroom head off of your glorified gasket scraper that’s killing my OCD lol

    • @bubbayesir7647
      @bubbayesir7647 5 днів тому +1

      The mushroom head comes off naturally and takes out one of your eyes. No grinding required. Lol

  • @burtonr
    @burtonr Місяць тому +7

    I love the excitement "I built a thing I needed!", then the immediate realization that "I could've just bought it"! hahah!
    I do the same thing. My justification is that it wasn't time wasted, it was time enjoyed.
    Glad you were able to fix up the cooling issue! It would be really cool to see it in person some day (south of your border). Keep up the awesome work guys!

  • @rasmuskruger3179
    @rasmuskruger3179 Місяць тому +3

    Came across the same problems with missing beads in my cooling pipes. Made a die in my lathe and used my lathe as a beadroller. Love those workshop stories. There are so many solutions to the same problem,, if you use your hands and brains, with the material you have.
    Spot on mate. Always a pleasure to watch your journey 💪

    • @avid6186
      @avid6186 Місяць тому +2

      Being more of a butcher than you guys I wrap a piece of wire around the tube and then flow a little solder onto it. Nobody can see it and it works fine 😊

    • @rasmuskruger3179
      @rasmuskruger3179 Місяць тому +1

      @avid6186 it's not stupid if it works. As I said - love the totally different approaches...

  • @murdoc6501
    @murdoc6501 Місяць тому +2

    Really appreciate how you and Elio approach problem solving and fabrication...your enthusiasm is infectious and highly entertaining! Go Japhands and Elio, keep moving forward!

  • @bobbofly
    @bobbofly Місяць тому +4

    Had a cooling issue with my 78 courier that drove me nuts for a couple weeks. came to find the impeller was free wheeling on the shaft like a de-clutching engine fan. 🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪

  • @minnesotatomcat
    @minnesotatomcat Місяць тому +3

    That’s a bad spot for the temp sensor, a mechanical gauge in the head would be a good way to prove if it’s actually overheating. Good call moving the steam port too, it should always go to the highest point. Be damn sure there’s no air trapped in the system somewhere, LS were kinda known for that, I think they normally vacuum fill them 👍

  • @bopeep2367
    @bopeep2367 Місяць тому +3

    Make sure you have the right mix coolant, 100% AF will not cool efficiently, it needs water for proper heat transfer.
    The suggestion to vacuum fill it is also valid. I believe they have cheap ones at Princess Auto.

    • @matthewmoilanen787
      @matthewmoilanen787 Місяць тому

      What I want to know is who ever has used 100% AF. Goodness sakes, I'm from Minnesota and we don't even go beyond 60% absolute max.

  • @davidbutcher1105
    @davidbutcher1105 Місяць тому +7

    Lucas Oil products are the best. I have no idea if it works, but it always makes me feel better when I use it.

  • @dcrahn
    @dcrahn Місяць тому +5

    Cavitation is actually air bubbles exploding, that was the sound of rocks you heard. The other thing is putting the temp sending unit and steam hose is the same area is a bad idea. Steam port could actually be heating the sender and giving a false reading. I suspect the temp is lower than what your gauge is showing. Is your trans cooler part of the radiator? If there is air in that part of the hose, that will give a false reading too.

    • @MakeItKustom
      @MakeItKustom  Місяць тому +3

      That’s so crazy! I didn’t realize it could sound like thay

    • @Boz4480
      @Boz4480 Місяць тому

      Fucking love this community. ⬆️

  • @rockyallen907
    @rockyallen907 Місяць тому +2

    Something I have run into in the past when doing engine swaps, especially when changing accessories. Make sure your water pump and alternator are running the correct direction. If belt routing changes it could cause a water pump to run backwards.

  • @chrisshorman522
    @chrisshorman522 Місяць тому +2

    If you find it's still overheating when you are loading it down I'd be checking to see if you have a head gasket issue. I haven't seen all the vids on this but I'd be getting the over flow bottle sniffed. If you don't have a buddy shop with one I'll help you. I'm in south van so not a huge drive. On the house. Love your style.

  • @djui5
    @djui5 Місяць тому +2

    It was both, that gurgling sound is a water pump bearing going out. Also LS engines have air pocket issues that steam ports help with. Nice work

  • @lesgaal4017
    @lesgaal4017 Місяць тому +2

    You have a thermal expansion problem under load on race car we would always have a expansion tank higher than the thermostat height also we would make a swirl pot .The water comming out of the engine goes through the swirl pot into the top radiator hose on top off the pot a hose runs into the high mounted expansion tank. Google swirl pots and it will give you ideas to fix your problem. I've always put swirl pots on all race and rally cars I've built. Hope information helps.

  • @bobgaylord8883
    @bobgaylord8883 Місяць тому +4

    Love seeing you make tools! I would've probably just laid a bead of weld around the circumfrance at the ends of the pipe to stop the hose from walking. Your way is much more professional.

    • @stevejones6647
      @stevejones6647 Місяць тому +2

      I’ve done the weld bead several times and the hoses never popped off. Takes 30 seconds. However if I had a shop loaded with cool equipment like Carl , I’d make a tool as well

    • @Alan-db7yh
      @Alan-db7yh Місяць тому +1

      Or weld a ring to keep the hose on

  • @MrBiddo
    @MrBiddo Місяць тому +1

    have you made sure your existing radiator isn't partially blocked? larger core may be the best solution if all else is functioning as intended. you could also test the flow rate also with a couple large buckets of water

  • @alchemymotorsports
    @alchemymotorsports Місяць тому +1

    I saw someone do tube beading on a legit pullmax recently. I also built a Karlmax bead profiler recently. I was planning to build some pipe dies, basically the same way you did here. You beat me to it!

  • @javman03
    @javman03 Місяць тому +3

    I have a 460 in a box truck that kept overheating in a similar manner. I tried everything I could think of, threw all the usual parts at it. No change. Bought one of those no spill radiator filler funnels that mount up on where the radiator cap goes and having the coolant level up at that higher position while running it up to temp burped out an air pocket from somewhere inside the engine that was trapped and it stays dead cool no matter what now.

    • @ivaneberle3972
      @ivaneberle3972 Місяць тому

      @@javman03 Vortecs and SBCs and V6s from early-mid 90s also benefit from this. Ordinarily, they fill & purge from overflow bottle mounted as highest tank... But it can be a sign of a cracked head or gasket if system stops drawing coolant back into radiator as it cools ( a "vacuum leak" somewhere in cooling system. External leak should obvious, but not always... Heater core, etc)

  • @stevesimons6333
    @stevesimons6333 Місяць тому +1

    You may need a better/larger transmission cooler. The trans can put a lot of heat into the engine. Just a thought.

    • @donames6941
      @donames6941 Місяць тому

      Yes with that big of body and a car motor i would run a big external trans cooler

  • @joecabral6607
    @joecabral6607 Місяць тому

    Carl love the channel. The other thing that adds heat to radiator is the cooler being to close to radiator we place our trans cooler away from the radiator and also add a small fan on cooler when we thi k its heating up on hills climbing. It help has big time.

  • @allanpepper9651
    @allanpepper9651 Місяць тому +9

    Where’s the ground for the sender?… also you shouldn’t use Teflon tape for senders as that can act as an insulator and give a bad ground.

    • @Mudgrove
      @Mudgrove Місяць тому +1

      exactly what I was thinking. Temp sensor mounted in a rubber hose - you need to ground the outer shell of the sensor.

    • @MakeItKustom
      @MakeItKustom  Місяць тому +3

      I did off camera

  • @user-tt3em9ep1h
    @user-tt3em9ep1h 12 днів тому

    That is a great Idea! Thanks for the LS info also.

  • @69MazdaR100
    @69MazdaR100 Місяць тому +1

    If thats a one wire sensor I’m surprised the temp gauge is working considering the outer threaded part needs to be grounded (usually in the engine block), I usually ground the pipe if it’s been fitted in a rubber hose like you have it fitted, with no grounding to thread.

  • @terryeustice5399
    @terryeustice5399 Місяць тому +2

    Congrats on the cooling system Karl. Thanks for sharing! 💯👊👍

  • @michellepaajanen550
    @michellepaajanen550 Місяць тому

    I was involved in a 500 Cadillac swap into a c10 . It's over heating was caused by airflow restrictions after the radiator, In our case, trimming the fan shroud allowed better airflow around the front of the engine . Or maybe airflow can't leave the engine bay . It's probably going to have several solutions

  • @Iowa599
    @Iowa599 Місяць тому

    i was going to say, just weld a bead around the end of the pipe. That's what I do, then smooth them with a grinder, but your welds are always flat.
    the bead isn't to seal, it's to prevent the clamp from slipping.

  • @5speediroc
    @5speediroc Місяць тому +4

    I would have off set the hole for the temp sensor so it wasn't directly across from the steam port. that might give you false temp readings.

  • @truckladders4104
    @truckladders4104 Місяць тому

    Carl look for a flow gauge from a HVAC suppliers Mount it in the upper rad hose and your lower to check water pump, rad cross flows and engines A gm dealer may be able to give the recommended floe rate You nee to get the steam line to expel into the top of the rad. Also check your fan belt pulley diameter You may need to speed up or slow down your pump speed. Dont use that additive indoor trans It will destroy your trans seals,clutches frictions Get an oil sample kit(try (Schaeffers distributor) or Caterpillar. it will give you the full condition of your oil. Are you certain you don't have mechanical issues?

  • @lelandbrown7847
    @lelandbrown7847 Місяць тому

    Don’t know what all you have checked. But if water pump is working fine check thermostat. If it’s working properly that would leave only one thing a leaky head gasket. To check head gaskets is a fairly simple test. Remove spark plugs then put air into cylinders and check to see if you get air bubbles in radiator

  • @truckladders4104
    @truckladders4104 Місяць тому

    The steam lines on the heads have two purposes 1 eliminate air pockets/blockage from steam pockets that form at the top of coolant flow @ to aid in coolant flow You are creating air pockets which restrict stop coolant flow Can you borrow an air lift coolant pump ? It fills your cooling system with a vacuum Work well its what the OE uses

  • @lynnmccurdythehdmmrc2561
    @lynnmccurdythehdmmrc2561 Місяць тому +8

    There is an Old Jeep trick for keeping the Temp Down. Use something like an old Windshield Washer system, when it starts getting hot, Spray water in front of the radiator.

    • @bullthrush
      @bullthrush Місяць тому +4

      I was about to suggest the same. Racing airplanes have been using "spray bars" since the '60s.

    • @ScottGovey
      @ScottGovey Місяць тому +3

      That does work except....if your in dusty environments nope! An actual example in my line of current work, customer has a grasshopper 725D and when his unit was getting hot he would stop and spray water on the radiator fins to cool it down and well long story short, it plugged the fins with dirt dust particles and burned up the engine. There's a place for every trick keep that in mind.

    • @tomcoryell
      @tomcoryell Місяць тому

      Red E Volkswagen shop in SLC makes a water sprayer to blast into the fan on an air cooled VW. Great for those hot days when you’re pulling a hill in a loaded down VW bus.

    • @MakeItKustom
      @MakeItKustom  Місяць тому +1

      That’s a killer idea as a back up lol

    • @lynnmccurdythehdmmrc2561
      @lynnmccurdythehdmmrc2561 Місяць тому

      @@MakeItKustom Both of my older brothers had Grand Cherokees. And did a lot of off roading in the Rocky Mountains. They claimed it was the best way to keep the temp down while rock crawling.

  • @geraldelwood9660
    @geraldelwood9660 Місяць тому

    For purposes of diagnosis; a stethoscope with a long probe is useful to locate the bearing which is creating the nasty noise.

  • @madlukasik
    @madlukasik Місяць тому

    Love your ingenious idea with your airgun tool!

  • @damiansailas6296
    @damiansailas6296 Місяць тому

    Yes you could have probably stuck the tube in the lower end to keep the hose from collapsing I believe the suction and heated water didn't allow good flow but your probably better than before by far with that job well done. Very interesting

  • @stevesloan6775
    @stevesloan6775 Місяць тому

    cavitation is wild. Super heated imploding bubbles.
    crazy hot.... I've had to put a different pulley on my water pump, because it now revs to 8,000rpm.
    cavitation was badly eating my aluminum thermostat housing after just 1200km.
    love your channel

  • @franksgarage8551
    @franksgarage8551 Місяць тому

    When grinder hit floor, i was about to comment exactly what you said. Those who know have been there. Some of us got lucky and didnt get hit with shrapnel.
    Did you ever pull starter to make sure bendix gear still has a spring return? Its a common LS issue.
    Gauge sender needs a ground so need to weld a tab to the pipe also.

  • @jimforsyth2.
    @jimforsyth2. Місяць тому +3

    That's the sound of the water pump . These the classic disruption

  • @Hertog_von_Berkshire
    @Hertog_von_Berkshire Місяць тому +4

    Kudos - the bead is venerable.

  • @zaydrahman3080
    @zaydrahman3080 Місяць тому +3

    My ls swap was overheating in the same manner. I replaced my thermostat and it corrected the problem. The thermostat was hanging up from time to time. I have the same steam port in my water pump. I live in Georgia where it stays really hot and I haven’t had any overheating issues since.

  • @briankinnear7461
    @briankinnear7461 Місяць тому

    Nice work on the cooling system fix. May be picky but I'd have shortened the upper rad hose where it attaches the rad. Just to move the electrical sensor away from the metal framing a bit more. Look forward to seeing more. Be safe and stay well.

  • @stephenpeterson6002
    @stephenpeterson6002 Місяць тому

    I don't advocate welding on galvanized anything, (grind the zinc off) but when I need a bead on a pipe/tube ,I weld a bead all around the tube. May not look so nice, but ti's covered anyway

  • @TonyFlaherty
    @TonyFlaherty Місяць тому +5

    On this episode of Make It Kustom, Carl drops pretty much everything 😂

  • @frankmouskovias8921
    @frankmouskovias8921 Місяць тому

    Just a thought about the position of the temperature sender in relation to the thermostat, if the thermostat does not open the temperature sensor will not detect the engine overheating,

  • @worstcrewchiefever6646
    @worstcrewchiefever6646 Місяць тому +1

    Mimic the factory cooling system. install the tank and all the water pump hoses the same way the factory did and it will cool properly.

  • @reinovator
    @reinovator Місяць тому

    bead maker try Chain links for different size pipe on a piece of flat stock in stead of half pipe or even bar/rod stock. just a thought.

  • @glenmiller3783
    @glenmiller3783 Місяць тому

    Hey Karl great videos, I made 1 1/8 x 1/4 thick aluminum disc with a radius on the outer edge. I bolt it to the upper shaft on my bead roller, then position the 3/8" female lower bead die centered on the aluminum radius then you can put the bead on your thin pipe real easy.

  • @user-zz8mr9nx2i
    @user-zz8mr9nx2i Місяць тому

    Check your radiator cap. I have a friend that spent a lot of money and time chasing a overheating problem when the only thing wrong was the cap.

  • @robertbennett9243
    @robertbennett9243 Місяць тому

    Good progress. Glad it's not overheating now. I still think you need holes in the bed for heat to escape better.

  • @billybones7121
    @billybones7121 Місяць тому

    VCMC! Love them!

  • @gsxrdrama9025
    @gsxrdrama9025 14 днів тому

    It would be awesome to see you team up with troy from cjrc and do some bead rolls and other sheet metal work

  • @wirefeed3419
    @wirefeed3419 Місяць тому

    As usual awesome job, I agree with your brother that you have a water problem not an air supply problem. I think you are going find that you have to have a tank off the Radiator to allow for the expansion of the system when the engine is at temperature. The exact reason coolant tanks have min/max levels that must be maintained.

  • @brucecard5213
    @brucecard5213 Місяць тому

    Cavitation can sound marbles banging around
    I just did same steam Port setup on my Chevelle Buddy has a couple cars with water pump Port
    But top of rad isn't as far above engine in his car as your set up

  • @ThomasThomas-wn3km
    @ThomasThomas-wn3km Місяць тому +1

    Drill 1/4 holes thru your little dies and use dog point screws. You'll know where to drill the holes from the set screw marks. Or what ever the minor diameter is of the set screws you're using to clamp with now. I thought I remembered you used 5/16 set screws. So the dog point will go thru the holes, keeping the dies from moving.

  • @dannyarchuleta7326
    @dannyarchuleta7326 Місяць тому

    My 2 cents, I'm in the process of 62 nova ls swap, and the radiator needs to be a ls style. Something about the flow direction, as well as steam port hook-up.

  • @Goldstandardmachine138
    @Goldstandardmachine138 Місяць тому +2

    Need to vacuum the cooling system when filling on LS based engines. Ive ran into the same problem after LS swapped cars. check it out. it works

    • @Goldstandardmachine138
      @Goldstandardmachine138 Місяць тому +2

      Uhh I commented too early... and fix the steam pipe BS. Theres your problem...

  • @user-mf4lf5pi9d
    @user-mf4lf5pi9d Місяць тому

    I use the bead roller I copied from you (thank you) to make coolant tubes.

  • @martinsteele3259
    @martinsteele3259 Місяць тому

    The tube bead will work! 10 min in! I have faith in you guys!

  • @Equiluxe1
    @Equiluxe1 Місяць тому

    I knew someone who changed the idler then the alternator and finally the water pump and the rattle was still there then one day the front pully stopped turning, the rattle was the crank had cracked in the front journal but as the crack was at an angle it took some time for front pully to move forward just enough to disengage from the rest of the crank, came across another case where the owner complained of a rattle and it was the front crank webb that had broken in two but the engine still kept running. I am surprised the temperature gauge works at all as I did not see an earth on the sender where you installed it.

  • @robertdelaney5994
    @robertdelaney5994 Місяць тому

    l had the same problem. . l had to stop cooling air from recirculating at slow speed up every hill . that was in a cab over engine with Chevy 350 . only had heating on slow pace hill .good luck.

  • @meldeeter6190
    @meldeeter6190 Місяць тому

    Do you have a cab heater core connected to the cooling system? If not you need to loop the heater connections at the water pump. If you are using the heater core the shutoff valve should have a bypass back to the water pump when closed and just not block the flow.

  • @garrykellogg3215
    @garrykellogg3215 Місяць тому

    I did not know that you had made the Steam-Port on the top of the water-pump like that instead of in the hoses. Yes, the Steam could have been the reason for all of the noises. It could either been trying to turn the impeller faster or trying to stop it. I still say to put a gap between all heat extractors (Radiator, Transmission cooler and A/C heat extractor), or to put them in other places.

  • @poolmotorrepairguyFL
    @poolmotorrepairguyFL Місяць тому

    The Florida pool pump motor repair guy 32750 approved ! that was good info & see = MiK

  • @bdpgarage
    @bdpgarage Місяць тому

    14:51 I was gonna say that I assume ya’ll know the LS motors use a reverse rotation water pump? Make sure you got the right one and the belts are routed to rotate it the right direction.

  • @wrenchbender01
    @wrenchbender01 Місяць тому +1

    Pipe dope is all I use.

  • @jonivanart
    @jonivanart Місяць тому

    You shouldn’t get steam if the system doesn’t have air in it. I think the steam port is a misnomer not actually steam. Plug it off and treat it like a normal cooling system. Put the thermostat right behind the thermostat. The temp may not actually be an issue as much as temp sender location. While there you can add a hole in the thermostat to aid in flow but a good/proper thermostat won’t need it.
    You also need an overflow tank to help purge any air and to keep the system full. Also as mentioned, definitely use a vacuum system to get the air out. Some engines are a pain to work the air out.

  • @ManKidRides
    @ManKidRides Місяць тому

    Don't know if i'd want to run temp guage right where you're introducing hot air. Apart from that, love your vids mate, learning so much from you!

  • @staceymackinnon
    @staceymackinnon Місяць тому

    The big issue on an LS is that it sucks the water from the top rad hose. Gm runs a surge tank that is higher than the top of the rad so that the rad never gets air at the top hose. I think that is more than likely the issue you are having

  • @kimthomsen1109
    @kimthomsen1109 Місяць тому +1

    Hey Karl
    The heat might be coming from the oil in the transmission just a thought love you work

  • @rexhavoc2982
    @rexhavoc2982 Місяць тому

    Drill a hole in the inner die and weld in a steel ball sticking up. Take the pump more appart. push a flex magnet into the block and grab some nuts, washers and pump parts before it gets into the new pump.

  • @marca5883
    @marca5883 Місяць тому

    💚🇬🇧🌱 love the hammer hammer upgrade, worked great🫶

  • @truckladders4104
    @truckladders4104 Місяць тому

    Do you have a temp gun? They are down under $100. You can make a heat map to see where your temps are Can also be usefull for fabricating and heat treating

  • @mrmongo6722
    @mrmongo6722 Місяць тому

    I’ve seen on other UA-cam channels where they modified an old set of vice grips to create a bead on tubing for turbo motors to keep the silicone hoses from blowing off under boost. It would probably be a total pain on that galvanized pipe. Besides modifying the hammer jammer is much better content. Well at least the cooling issue seems to be solved with a new water pump and that doohickey. Hopefully the Lucas mystery goop solves your transmission issue. 🍻

  • @mikepettengill2706
    @mikepettengill2706 Місяць тому

    You gotta have a boroscope! Check those fins!

  • @Marty59143
    @Marty59143 Місяць тому

    If the cooling problem persists it may be air getting trapped behind the thermostat. With air gap at thermostat it won’t work. Two .125 inch holes in thermostat will let air pass and it will work.

  • @ivaneberle3972
    @ivaneberle3972 Місяць тому +1

    Didn't some early LS motors similar to mid-90's SBC LT Vette engines have reverse coolant flow? Make sure you've got the right direction of flow for the WP and that it's vacuum-bled if so. Steam pockets can crack heads. Too, If you're flowing your transmission into a radiator cooler, as well as a remote aux trans coole, it could be why your engine is overheating (for instance slipping frictions could cause this. The wrong TC, too. If you don't know the provenence of the trans, if it was set up to drag race and hook the tires up... this all might have been by design)

  • @akm0614
    @akm0614 Місяць тому

    Are you sure you’re not still overheating, or did you just move the temp sender to a cooler part of the system? That radiator hose is after the thermostat, so the engine is going to see that heat before the water makes it down that hose.

  • @johnlee8231
    @johnlee8231 Місяць тому

    Just a quick thought with the cooling system issue. You guys haven't changed or added to the accesory locations so that belt rotation has chainged on the waterpump?

  • @richardsmith-qy6vl
    @richardsmith-qy6vl Місяць тому

    Great video im having the same problem with my big block street car it has a pair of electric fans and dont cool so im going to get some fans that pull more cfm.

  • @jasonhabrock854
    @jasonhabrock854 Місяць тому +1

    I know you like to fabricate those dies but why not draw it up and cut them on the FastCut?

    • @douglascaskey7302
      @douglascaskey7302 Місяць тому +1

      That was my thought too as he was welding a bunch of pieces togther. Also the botton die did not have to be a bump on a round piece of pipe... it too could have been a flat piece cut on the cnc. But hey... Karl made it work.

  • @davidkean8399
    @davidkean8399 Місяць тому

    You had air or vapor lock in heater core it sometimes gets chased out maybe cab being tipped so many times got air out

  • @davidkean8399
    @davidkean8399 Місяць тому

    Coolant burp funnel above the heater core if air get in core it needs to be pushed out, hench the burp funnel, and I'm guessing heater core in that is higher than motor and rad, good luck no extra rads pleaseeee

  • @loganpenland6568
    @loganpenland6568 Місяць тому

    Hey i always tee into a heater hose . I have swapped multiple vehicles that have old style radiators. Has worked perfectly fine for me. Also when you refill the water system. Pour half radiator full. Then take top radiator hose off pour your antifreeze mix in hose to fill engine until it wont hold anymore then shove it on the radiator and fill the rest of radiator with antifreeze. Sooo many people just fill rad and it will airlock everytime. Gta fill top hose until it wont hold no more

  • @leen352
    @leen352 Місяць тому

    just did an LS swap on my 49 Pontiac, I just bought from Rockauto a radiator and fans that belongs to that engine, it is not that big of a radiator, fittings are there where they belong, don,t try to invent new stuff. those vent tubes are serious. Google bleed LS engine and I am sure problems are solved, good luck my friends!

  • @HOTHUDSON54
    @HOTHUDSON54 Місяць тому

    LS engines historically had some weird cooling concerns. My 2004 5.3 sucked most of the "orange coolant" through the combustion chambers and out the exhaust., That was at 102K miles. I added a couple of bottles of BARRS LOCK block sealant to the radiator and used water then crossed my fingers. The BARRS LOCK successfully sealed the block and I have driven it an additional 160K miles. I will admit that the vehicle has had two water pumps and one radiator replacement. The steam port will pressurize the flow of water in the pump. During the water pump replacement and the radiator replacements coolant and corrosion trash was found which I suspect contributed to our coolant woes. GOOD LUCK on your journey.

    • @dillonweigel3101
      @dillonweigel3101 Місяць тому

      I cannot recommend this. If coolant is going through the combustion chambers, your head gasket is likely bad. Any sort of “sealant” added to the cooling system can close off coolant passages, likely why you had to put a radiator in it. It’s an LS, a new head gasket takes a few hours to install. You’ve been lucky getting that many miles out of it like that. Often times I’ve seen sealants like that completely seal shut the coolant passages either at the head or at the block, where the head gasket is, causing more issues than it solves

    • @danielbuckner2167
      @danielbuckner2167 Місяць тому

      Dexcool dissolves gaskets. It's a common issue.

  • @jayinmi3706
    @jayinmi3706 Місяць тому

    I wonder if the steam port was aerating he coolant and causing bubbles to stick on the temp sensor. Since you made it sound like it only really happened going up hills, maybe the sensor was above the normally highest part of the system or someething weird likee that (not sure I'm explaining it correctly, but you probably get the idea) and it could have ebeen cooling fine he whole time, just the gauge read hot?

  • @guyfranks4354
    @guyfranks4354 Місяць тому

    15:15 Do you have a dedicated LS Radiator? They have ports in the tanks on them for that very reason. I'm just throwing this out there. I don't remember if you used an LS radiator when dropping the engine in the frame on this build.

  • @professorfalken4600
    @professorfalken4600 Місяць тому +1

    USE 2 RADIATORS LIKE MATTS OFF-ROAD RECOVERY DID ON THE WRECKER BUILD

    • @user-iy6de7qi1r
      @user-iy6de7qi1r Місяць тому

      Funny how so many of us visit the same sites!

  • @robostyle9773
    @robostyle9773 Місяць тому

    Thanks for another great video

  • @tezsullivan6048
    @tezsullivan6048 Місяць тому

    Thanks for the great content, as usual.

  • @jeremyhanna3852
    @jeremyhanna3852 Місяць тому

    Ive done 4 ls swap steam port in same place all run fine but none were a huge truck i think you just dont have enuff rad you need something big maybe add a oil cooler

  • @anvilhammer4144
    @anvilhammer4144 Місяць тому +1

    A welder can fix anything, from the crack of dawn and to a broken heart.

  • @donames6941
    @donames6941 Місяць тому

    Like i said before if your fan isnt mounted in the shroud right it wont flow cooling air right and cause a over heat problem at certain speeds did you check it? It looks to be to far into the rad .Set the fan like your pickup

  • @user-zr2eg3bk2j
    @user-zr2eg3bk2j Місяць тому +1

    COOL truck.......Now!