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Thermostat Change

thespartan0199

Freshman Member
Offline
Hi All,
My thermostat failed and apparently I don't know what I'm doing because it was immediately seeping water at the housing slightly after I changed it.
I've never touched this on my car. When I took it apart it had the "original style" thermostat in there, 30+ years old. I decided to change with modern style.

I have the following new parts that I reassembled:
Brass sleeve
Small "thermostat gasket"
thermostat
thermostat housing gasket

What I read recommends the use of the sleeve; is this common practice?

What order should the parts and gaskets be assembled in? I put the small thermostat gasket under the brass sleeve which I thought made sense, but looking back now I have no idea if I assembled the parts and gaskets in the optimum order.

At this point I just want it to not leak.

1961 Austin Healey 3000

Thanks!
 
I assumed AI would have no idea, but it has a suggestion which differs from what I did, so I'll try this.

  1. Small circular thermostat gasket
    • Fits around the thermostat itself.
    • Common on many modern cars.
    • Not normally used on an Austin-Healey 3000 with the original thermostat housing and brass sleeve.
  2. Large thermostat housing gasket
    • Fits between the cylinder head and the thermostat housing.
    • This is the gasket you should use.

Correct assembly order​


From the cylinder head upward:

cylinder head
brass sleeve
modern thermostat spring down towards engine
large housing gasket
thermostat housing
 
Let us know how the AI suggestion works out. I've found a few AI tech answers to be spot on, but I always try to verify the details with a non-AI source.

Tom M.
 
I’ve never understood the purpose of the small round gasket. The housing holds the t-stat in place and the larger gasket seal the housing to the head. The small gasket seems like it’s worthless.
 
I’ve never understood the purpose of the small round gasket. The housing holds the t-stat in place and the larger gasket seal the housing to the head. The small gasket seems like it’s worthless.

I think it's there to (theoretically) seal around the thermostat so coolant doesn't leak past it. I also think the amount of coolant that could 'leak' is inconsequential; if I have one I'll install it, if not I don't lose any sleep over it. The seem to dissolve eventually anyway.
 
Check thermostat housing for any signs of pitting from corrosion. A pitted housing around sealing surfaces could cause sealing issues. A thin coat of RTV usually stops the leak/weep.
 
How do you know the old one failed? What were the symptoms? Did the car suddenly overheat, or did it spring a leak & if so where was the leak?

You say you changed from "original style" to "new style" - do you have pictures? Did you put the old one in a pan of water and bring it to a boil to see if it still worked? There should be markings on the old one to indicate the temperature it was designed to open - 160, 170,180, 190, etc. & with a candy thermometer and your thermostat in water, you can test to see if it is still within spec.

As to the gasket choices, you are trying for two things - no leakage to the outside, and no leakage thru when the thermostat is closed (obvously the less critical of the two).

Anyway, pictures can go a long way to helping solve any riddle.
 
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