What did you do with your Range Rover today

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Trailer on, Picked up a Honda crv diesel that broke down with this ongoing issue happening when it feels like it,
And also bought a motd mk3 mondeo st tdci in the st blue off a pal for a 100,
He took subframe and engine and box out, put on a decent front subframe and new clutch and new springs and brakes and can't get it to start again it was a running driving motor i seen it drive into his unit,

Hopefully i can get it going and just use the rangie for work and the mondog to go to the unit and back most of the time save the rangie getting so dirty inside while reading the article here
Sounds like a pretty busy day!
 
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Used the remote pre heater again yesterday!
Car was warm inside lovely!! But seemed to lose heat quickly once i started the engine.
Is that right? If so seems pointless waste of diesel other than clearing the front screen
 
Used the remote pre heater again yesterday!
Car was warm inside lovely!! But seemed to lose heat quickly once i started the engine.
Is that right? If so seems pointless waste of diesel other than clearing the front screen
I would guess its like the early cars coolant only circulates heater core and the pre heater then when the vehicle is started a control valve opens and it changes over to use the main coolant system,
 
I would guess its like the early cars coolant only circulates heater core and the pre heater then when the vehicle is started a control valve opens and it changes over to use the main coolant system,
Edited after rereading StuStrong's post. This is the valve you are talking about I guess but I'd be surprised at that design as I was under the impression that the FBH should shut off around 70ºc too avoid opening the thermostat and thus losing heat out of the main radiator. That being the case it should be heating the main cooling system and after all, that is the primary point of the FBH, cabin heat or pre-heat is a plus. If my tone seems to be of jealousy, you're right it is as my FBH still isn't fixed but I have bigger issues currently :)

Original post:
Back when I was trying to resolve my heater issues I replaced the valve that controls them (down the side of the engine on the inner wing) but it didn't fix it. Then I found there was another behind the engine on the bulkhead that seems to control the flow of coolant to the FBH. That was in a similar state inside (albeit seized on mine). I wonder if that could be your issue? Perhaps sticking and either not warming all of the coolant or allowing it to flow too fast. Just an idea and they are a cheap part to fix as well as being much easier than the main one to change.
IMG-5900.jpg
 
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Edited after rereading StuStrong's post. This is the valve you are talking about I guess but I'd be surprised at that design as I was under the impression that the FBH should shut off around 70ºc too avoid opening the thermostat and thus losing heat out of the main radiator. That being the case it should be heating the main cooling system and after all, that is the primary point of the FBH, cabin heat or pre-heat is a plus. If my tone seems to be of jealousy, you're right it is as my FBH still isn't fixed but I have bigger issues currently :)

Original post:
Back when I was trying to resolve my heater issues I replaced the valve that controls them (down the side of the engine on the inner wing) but it didn't fix it. Then I found there was another behind the engine on the bulkhead that seems to control the flow of coolant to the FBH. That was in a similar state inside (albeit seized on mine). I wonder if that could be your issue? Perhaps sticking and either not warming all of the coolant or allowing it to flow too fast. Just an idea and they are a cheap part to fix as well as being much easier than the main one to change.
IMG-5900.jpg
seized sounds likely, i mean things dont get maintained, only fixed once broked


but i guess could also be related to the hevac not working properly.. thinking about pulling the battery and seeing if it resets anything.. nothing to lose there
 
seized sounds likely, i mean things dont get maintained, only fixed once broked


but i guess could also be related to the hevac not working properly.. thinking about pulling the battery and seeing if it resets anything.. nothing to lose there
I've replaced that exchange valve as @Blob describes

I just had no warmth in the cab at all, never tried the fbh before i changed the valve as it was still warm weather

Yours was blowing warm wasn't it the other day
 
Grrrrrrr

on my D1 the brake reservoir has a level detector as part of the cap

after 25 years it still works so an off the shelf solution might exist

Yes but the cap on the Rangie is different and has to hold pressure.

Had a play this morning and 2 nails in a cup of coolant work well with a buzzer except it buzzes when there's coolant rather than a lack. So, just need to reverse that and a relay should do that. I'm even wondering if there's a spare bulb in the instrument cluster, maybe one used for the v8 but not on the oil burner!

Thinking about it, I only want to know when coolant is in there so should be able to feed 2 screws in from the top of the tank. I'm building up the courage to have a go with the one on the scrapper.
 
Edited after rereading StuStrong's post. This is the valve you are talking about I guess but I'd be surprised at that design as I was under the impression that the FBH should shut off around 70ºc too avoid opening the thermostat and thus losing heat out of the main radiator. That being the case it should be heating the main cooling system and after all, that is the primary point of the FBH, cabin heat or pre-heat is a plus. If my tone seems to be of jealousy, you're right it is as my FBH still isn't fixed but I have bigger issues currently :)

Original post:
Back when I was trying to resolve my heater issues I replaced the valve that controls them (down the side of the engine on the inner wing) but it didn't fix it. Then I found there was another behind the engine on the bulkhead that seems to control the flow of coolant to the FBH. That was in a similar state inside (albeit seized on mine). I wonder if that could be your issue? Perhaps sticking and either not warming all of the coolant or allowing it to flow too fast. Just an idea and they are a cheap part to fix as well as being much easier than the main one to change.
IMG-5900.jpg

I suspect there's a seal where the solenoid connects and if that fails it will hydrolock the solenoid. It will just move in and out depending on power applied.
 
seized sounds likely, i mean things dont get maintained, only fixed once broked


but i guess could also be related to the hevac not working properly.. thinking about pulling the battery and seeing if it resets anything.. nothing to lose there

Yes, if it is anything like the Jag then it diverts water to the cab or rad as required.
 
Was driving home to Langley from Ferndown today & EAS started flashing high mode. Caught it in time & pressed down before it faulted. Later on way to Bedford I missed the flashing led & it went into fault mode just before Dunstable. Nanocom was in other P38 so no way to reset it :mad: .

Turned back home & managed to reach M25/A404 junction before hitting bump stops, so bouncy ride back to Langley.

Got Nanocom out of other P38 & reset EAS. It decided to raise the left side only !! Nanocom was reporting rear solenoids only, so it's wierd the FL & RL pumped up. In the end I levelled it using my manual control box, after which the EAS ECU managed to get it correct !!

Moral or the story . . . . .remember to put my Nanocom in the car I'm using that day !!

IMG_0344.JPGIMG_0345.JPGIMG_0346.JPG
 
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Yes but the cap on the Rangie is different and has to hold pressure.

Had a play this morning and 2 nails in a cup of coolant work well with a buzzer except it buzzes when there's coolant rather than a lack. So, just need to reverse that and a relay should do that. I'm even wondering if there's a spare bulb in the instrument cluster, maybe one used for the v8 but not on the oil burner!

Thinking about it, I only want to know when coolant is in there so should be able to feed 2 screws in from the top of the tank. I'm building up the courage to have a go with the one on the scrapper.

I have the two screw system - stainless - about a half inch apart for my D1 coolant level linked to my madman system

no issues for over ten years now

i was thinking that striping the cap system apart might work as the float and electrics are all present
 
seized sounds likely, i mean things dont get maintained, only fixed once broked


but i guess could also be related to the hevac not working properly.. thinking about pulling the battery and seeing if it resets anything.. nothing to lose there
Does your gauge stay stable in one position? I've noticed mine is all over the place but I also get fairly frequent faulty wiring codes for the viscous fan so my guess is that is sending temps all over the place.
 
Reading this I'd say the FBH should only heat the cabin until the engine is up to temp.

From Rave

On Td6 models, the FBH also boosts the heater coolant temperature while the engine is running at low ambient air and
engine coolant temperatures, to maintain heater performance at an acceptable level.
 
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