Hey guys this is my 1st post on this forum but my wife encouraged me to share my knowledge with you guys. I bought my wife an 03 FX for Christmas. It was described to me by the previous owner that his wife was driving the fx to work and one day it just overheated without any warning. First problem they ever had with it and have owned is since new. They had it towed to a shop and they told her she needed a new engine which is how I got pulled in to the situation. The customer called my company to get a quote on an engine rebuild. After talking for a while he asked me if I was interested in buying the fx. He didn't want to invest the money in it and want to buy a BMW X5( Like that's going forward, going backwards IMO). So I bought it and trailered it to my shop. The first thing we did was replace the thermostat and I noticed black flaky stuff in the coolant which I knew was the viton coating from the head gaskets. So I bought some Blue Devel and ran it through to the cooling system. I could tell compression was bleeding into the cooling system. The blue devel solution worked for about 4 mths or so then it blew the radiator and burned the motor UP!! I ended removing the motor and replacing the heads and block along with a new radiator. It runs great now with 300+ miles on it. But the entire problem started from the factory head gaskets. They are a terrible design and will give up eventually on most of the early model fx's. When I rebuilt the engine we used Victor Rienz head gaskets which the entire gasket is coated in Viton versus the factory which only has viton covering around the combustion chamber only. For some reason this a serious problem and deteriorates over time then compression leaks into the cooling system pressurizing it and pushes the coolant into the overflow tank. This is my 4th or 5th VQ35 engine I've rebuild in 8 years or so. Most people are not willing to spend the money the rebuilds because all these engines failed from the exact same problem which is over heating. I always have to replaced the heads and get a new short block because the engines got so hot heads are warped to the point they are no good and the block warps too.
The other major problem is the factory temp gauge is a SERIOUS POS!!! The Service manual says the gauge is in the Cold when 122* or colder, middle position is 156*-233*, hot is *266. This is ridiculous, you really don't get much of a opportunity to get off the road and shut your vehicle off before your engine is toasted. I bought a Scan Gauge II for the FX and mounted it cleanly in it so my wife can see the actual temp that the ECU see's that way she doesn't have to depend on the factory gauge which will cost you an engine one day. But for those with good running motors I would highly recommend the scan gauge. It is digital, clean, and i have the display calibrated to the same orange color as the factory interior without having to put a ricer gauge in a luxury SUV.
Sorry for being long winded but have I read sooooo many over heating stories where people reported their problems but no explanation for why they had their problems. I felt compelled to explain the situation to members here. I could clearly see there wasn't much info out there on the net about what really is going on internally with these engines.
The other major problem is the factory temp gauge is a SERIOUS POS!!! The Service manual says the gauge is in the Cold when 122* or colder, middle position is 156*-233*, hot is *266. This is ridiculous, you really don't get much of a opportunity to get off the road and shut your vehicle off before your engine is toasted. I bought a Scan Gauge II for the FX and mounted it cleanly in it so my wife can see the actual temp that the ECU see's that way she doesn't have to depend on the factory gauge which will cost you an engine one day. But for those with good running motors I would highly recommend the scan gauge. It is digital, clean, and i have the display calibrated to the same orange color as the factory interior without having to put a ricer gauge in a luxury SUV.
Sorry for being long winded but have I read sooooo many over heating stories where people reported their problems but no explanation for why they had their problems. I felt compelled to explain the situation to members here. I could clearly see there wasn't much info out there on the net about what really is going on internally with these engines.
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