How to diagnose a coolant leak?


Regards,
Jerry
Also smell around the engine bay. Leaking or weeping components will generate a coolant smell. My GLE with M276 engine has a weeping/sweating circulation pump, which is fairly common phenomenon for this cheap and widely used Mercedes component.
Smell inside the vehicle for potential leaks in the HVAC.
Pull the spark plugs. If they any are "washed" clean, that is a sign of coolant entering the combustion chamber from a failed head gasket. Also look down into the combustion chamber with a bright light and note if the top of the piston is "washed" clean which indicates coolant in the combustion chamber.
Rough idle is a symptom of coolant in the combustion chamber, with or without check engine light.
Look under the oil fill cap for chocolate milk sludge. This indicates coolant in the oil.
Who changed the head bolts, when were they changes, and by which method were they changed?
Last edited by chassis; Feb 24, 2021 at 11:46 PM.
Also smell around the engine bay. Leaking or weeping components will generate a coolant smell. My GLE with M276 engine has a weeping/sweating circulation pump, which is fairly common phenomenon for this cheap and widely used Mercedes component.
Smell inside the vehicle for potential leaks in the HVAC.
Pull the spark plugs. If they any are "washed" clean, that is a sign of coolant entering the combustion chamber from a failed head gasket. Also look down into the combustion chamber with a bright light and note if the top of the piston is "washed" clean which indicates coolant in the combustion chamber.
Rough idle is a symptom of coolant in the combustion chamber, with or without check engine light.
Look under the oil fill cap for chocolate milk sludge. This indicates coolant in the oil.
Who changed the head bolts, when were they changes, and by which method were they changed?
The bolts were done about 30K miles ago by Mazdeuce. It’s THAT R63. Hehe.




Next phase of the nightmare, that coolant pipe is unique to our R63. The dealer was able to coble one together from R350 and ML63 parts but the OEM part is no longer available. $600 in rubber hoses later and I'm running like new.
Like the others said, pressure test it.
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Watch the situation over time and take note of all the observations suggested to you. Have the coolant system pressure tested. You need data. You have insufficient data at this point.
We took off the underbelly, and traced a leak to this fat hose on the right side of the radiator:
We first thought it was a radiator leak (bad!), then we looked more closely and it really looked more like a hose leak (less bad but still bad) but then we REALLY looked closely, and realised it has one of those insanely annoying clamps that don't really clamp anything, and are more of a decoration. So we decided to swap that useless clamp for a proper one that actually holds the hose down:
Now we vacuumed out some loose coolant and did a vacuum test on the system, and this time, the vacuum held! So we refilled the coolant, closed everything up, and I was on my way. Checked the hose when I got home, dry as a bone. Will keep an eye on it.
Offender:
I don't know if it was a cold climate switch, but I guess I'm somewhat worried other clamps will go loose with time - Audi had similar clamps, and I simply cannot stand them. But I think this panic is avoided this time! Thank you everyone for your advice!




