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1996 Tacoma Overheating Problem

Discussion in '1st Gen. Tacomas (1995-2004)' started by CountChocula, Jun 29, 2021.

  1. Jun 29, 2021 at 3:57 PM
    #1
    CountChocula

    CountChocula [OP] New Member

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    1996 Tacoma 2.4l Regular Cab 4 cylinder Stick Shift
    Howdy Tacoma world,
    I have a mystery I am trying to solve. I overheated back in March after driving 150 miles towards the coast for vacation. I did not notice I was overheating until I blew the top radiator hose off. I replaced the hose, (luckily a friend was heading down as well so I had a ride to auto zone) refilled the coolant/water and got back on the road only to overheat again 15 minutes later. Left the vehicle at a hotel and had it towed back to my mechanic after the trip. At first it would not overheat for them. I suggested the water pump as my radiator and fan clutch were both done 3 years prior. It was the original water pump, so seemed like a possibility. They replaced pump, hoses, belts, and thermostat. After the job it overheated right away and they diagnosed a blown head gasket. I gave the green light and they replaced the gasket and sent head to a machine shop. All was good again for a couple of months driving it around town. Two weeks ago I tried to take another trip, an hour or so in and after going up a long hill it overheated again. Again I had it towed back, and again it would not overheat for the mechanics and we can't diagnose until it does. Any thoughts?
    1996 2.4 liter manual, 4 cylinder, 220000 miles.
    New head gasket, thermostat, water pump, hoses, fan belts, radiator cap.
    3 year old radiator and fan clutch.
    No loss of coolant, still looks fresh and full
    Noticed a little more of a roaring sound before it overheated
    Still driving short trips around town, temp staying where it should.
    Afraid to drive more than an hour now
    Thanks is advance
     
    Last edited: Jun 29, 2021
  2. Jun 29, 2021 at 6:53 PM
    #2
    Kwikvette

    Kwikvette Well-Known Member Vendor

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    4 run, 2 don't
    How are you monitoring temperatures?

    I ask because the first time you overheated, you had clear visual indicators IE blown radiator hose.

    After all that work, I would guess you shouldn't have overheating issues so when you did, were you following the gauge on your dash?

    Not sure how a 5 lug Tacoma's dash is any different, but temp senders can go bad and give you a false in-cab reading.
     
  3. Jun 29, 2021 at 6:59 PM
    #3
    Glamisman

    Glamisman Well-Known Member

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    see if the A/C condenser is clean, the fins are straight and there are no obstructions. In addition there should be a fan shroud.
     
  4. Jun 29, 2021 at 7:34 PM
    #4
    CountChocula

    CountChocula [OP] New Member

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    1996 Tacoma 2.4l Regular Cab 4 cylinder Stick Shift
    I have been monitoring the in dash temp gauge. Before the hose blew I was not paying attention so never saw it go red, after the hose was replaced and I drove 15 minutes, I watched it climb and you could hear the hissing etc when I opened the hood. I think it is working but I agree it could be worth looking into. I will check AC condenser as well. Thanks for the input.
     
  5. Jun 29, 2021 at 9:35 PM
    #5
    SLAPS 65

    SLAPS 65 Dirty deeds, done dirt cheap..

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    Ya, it does sound like an air flow problem. Around town with not much load on the engine it’s fine. could also be a defective thermostat not opening enough, I’ve seen a couple just in the last year, brand new not opening enough or at all. If ya do try a new thermostat go OE Toyota there is a difference.
     
  6. Jun 30, 2021 at 11:51 AM
    #6
    JudoJohn

    JudoJohn Well-Known Member

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    b8hickman likes this.
  7. Jul 19, 2021 at 3:16 AM
    #7
    NachoTaco96

    NachoTaco96 Well-Known Member

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    Mostly 340,000 miles of wear on the '96. A sharp looking Gasshole for the '21
    Any updates? I hope you and your '96 are well. Going out on a limb here but "roaring" can be a sign of cavitation in pumps, i.e. pump suction side vaporization. Typically that's caused by flow problems on the suction side. I'm saying this as a chemical and power plant guy and I have no idea if this can happen on a Yoda...but a old scale breaking loose could clog up a new radiator and starve the suction side. If that's crazy talk, tell me why. - I have a '96 2.4L . I replaced my OEM Radiator in Feb ('21) at 320K and was shocked at the total P.O.S. replacement. BTW - Any leads on a bad a$$ all metal radiator for a 2.4 L Tacoma would be greatly appreciated, the quality of the replacement was so poor I can imagine all sorts of failures.
     

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