I have a 2001 Grand Am, 4 cylinder, that is overheating. At first we thought it was the thermostat, so we took it out and it runs fine/doesn't overheat, so we figured that was the problem. Put a new thermostat in, and it started running hot again. Next we changed the radiator, since we thought that was the only other thing it could be, but that still didn't work, still ran hot. We took the new thermostat out, and it runs fine. Checked both thermostats in hot water to make sure they'd open, and they're both fine.
I've been reading other websites to try to see what else it can be, and the only thing I can find is that some people have fixed overheating problems like this by changing the reservoir/cap, because apparently they can get worn out and the seal fails so that the coolant just leaks out through the reservoir. Could this be my problem?
The reason I haven't just tried it yet is because I don't want to go out and spend more money, when this doesn't really make sense to me. If that's the problem, then it should still overheat even with the thermostat out, which it doesn't do.
With the thermostat in, it doesn't get hot when it's just at idle, but as soon as I drive it at all, it shoots up to over 260F within a mile.
I've been reading other websites to try to see what else it can be, and the only thing I can find is that some people have fixed overheating problems like this by changing the reservoir/cap, because apparently they can get worn out and the seal fails so that the coolant just leaks out through the reservoir. Could this be my problem?
The reason I haven't just tried it yet is because I don't want to go out and spend more money, when this doesn't really make sense to me. If that's the problem, then it should still overheat even with the thermostat out, which it doesn't do.
With the thermostat in, it doesn't get hot when it's just at idle, but as soon as I drive it at all, it shoots up to over 260F within a mile.