AKfish
Super Member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2004
- Messages
- 5,419
- Location
- Alaska
- Tractor
- JD 5115M; JD 110 TLB; JD 4720; Ford 9N; JD X300R
Getting the tractor back together and running again will sure help with diagnosing the problem. (You didn't say if it was running OK before you drained the oil.)
It seems to me that pressurizing the cooling system would verify a leak versus just condensation or possible water collecting from the exhaust pipe (if it has been sitting outside for a long stretch of time), etc.
Definitely a bad head gasket is a better outcome than a cracked block. I'm no Ford expert and don't know if your tractor is a wet-sleeved engine, though.
Along this line, I'm wondering if you had a split sleeve; could that be the source of the coolant? That'd be a better problem to have than the block busted --- more work and parts to replace (gaskets, etc.) than the head gasket --- but definitely cheaper to fix than replacing the block!
Maybe some of the 'ol Ford diesel guys can chime in and speak to this possibility. My .02 sence /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
AKfish
It seems to me that pressurizing the cooling system would verify a leak versus just condensation or possible water collecting from the exhaust pipe (if it has been sitting outside for a long stretch of time), etc.
Definitely a bad head gasket is a better outcome than a cracked block. I'm no Ford expert and don't know if your tractor is a wet-sleeved engine, though.
Along this line, I'm wondering if you had a split sleeve; could that be the source of the coolant? That'd be a better problem to have than the block busted --- more work and parts to replace (gaskets, etc.) than the head gasket --- but definitely cheaper to fix than replacing the block!
Maybe some of the 'ol Ford diesel guys can chime in and speak to this possibility. My .02 sence /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
AKfish