My friend's 1990 Festiva froze up, overheated, and blew a headgasket and warped the head.
I used to have a festiva, and I love the little cars, so me and my buddies are fixing it! (Body is in great shape, interior is oddly dirty, but that can be fixed.)
It was pumping air into the coolant lines, so we got the head off, and sure enough, the headgasket was blown.
Using a straight edge and feeler gauge, the best I can tell is the head is banana shaped, with about .017" gap in the middle with the straight edge going from end to end.
I've been talking to a machine shop which says they can mill it flat. We'll be getting a head gasket kit, and putting it all back together. Does this seem reasonable?
Part of the issue is though, the cluster gauges don't work. (Partly why my friend didn't know it was overheating.)
The speedometer works sometimes, the handbrake light is stuck on, the gas gauge works rarely, and the temp gauge is completely dead.
Should I tear into the dash first to clean connections? Or start tracing down wires and testing sensors?
And before you say to move on, realize we paid $660 for this car, and we're having fun with it.
I used to have a festiva, and I love the little cars, so me and my buddies are fixing it! (Body is in great shape, interior is oddly dirty, but that can be fixed.)
It was pumping air into the coolant lines, so we got the head off, and sure enough, the headgasket was blown.
Using a straight edge and feeler gauge, the best I can tell is the head is banana shaped, with about .017" gap in the middle with the straight edge going from end to end.
I've been talking to a machine shop which says they can mill it flat. We'll be getting a head gasket kit, and putting it all back together. Does this seem reasonable?
Part of the issue is though, the cluster gauges don't work. (Partly why my friend didn't know it was overheating.)
The speedometer works sometimes, the handbrake light is stuck on, the gas gauge works rarely, and the temp gauge is completely dead.
Should I tear into the dash first to clean connections? Or start tracing down wires and testing sensors?
And before you say to move on, realize we paid $660 for this car, and we're having fun with it.
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