940 turbo volvo died on the way home......

Hi everyone my name is kasoma and i am new here. i am having a problem with my 93 940 turbo wagon. i was returning from the county fair and while driving about 55mph it suddenly died on me.i waited a couple of minutes and it started up again. it did this abot three more times and then was ok... but i kept it under 35. while looking under the hood today i noticed a fresh puddle iof antifreeze comming from where the head and the timing cover meet. this car was serviced by a local dealer called bruce cox before i bought it in march. does anyone know what the problem is before i take it to get it fixed? thanks!!!kasoma duplantis

Reply to
snpboy
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The two things may or may not be related (coolant loss and engine dying). For the engine dying, it may be the fuel relay. In the spring mine (1994 940 Turbo wagon) did the same thing yours did and died multiple times on both interstate and secondary roads. I replaced the fuel relay myself in my driveway with a new unit from Volvo ($50) and ~20-30 minutes of time, mainly disassembly and reassembly of the center console.

I don't know about the collant leak, mine hasn't had that happen. If the engine was overheated before you bought it, then the head might be warped, or the gasket cracked, or something else. Take off the timing cover if you can, and see if you can find the leak, then go from there.

NCMan

Reply to
Opie

today i noticed

Not sure exactly where on the engine this is, could you please be more specific?

Hopefully it is nothing more than a weeping thermostat housing gasket, but it could be a warped head with failed head gasket.

Reply to
zencraps

The 2 problems are definitely unrelated.

Coolant issue: Check to see if there are signs of coolant in the oil or oil in the coolant....sure positive on head gasket failure. If not, look closer around the water pump, they are bad to leak at the seal on the top where it meets the head, especially on the B230FT. You may just need a new seal and reinstall. Make sure you pry up on the water pump while you tighten the bolts to ensure a good future seal. Check all the hoses closely, and If you still think it's a blown head gasket and you have no oil/coolant swapping, and no white smoke, do a compression check, both wet and dry. If all are within 15% the head gasket is fine.

Stalling: The stalling issue is 1000% fuel pump relay, it is the big white one behind your ashtray. 90% of the time the relay itself is not bad, just solder joints old and broken from 15 years of heating/cooling rapidly. When it restarts after the relay cools down (solder joints contract), this is always the case. Pull the relay, carefully pry it apart, and examine the solder joints. I'll bet you find that they have hairline cracks in a ring all the way around one or two of the joints. Pull out your trusty soldering iron and 'reflow' the solder joints to renew the failed connection. Voila!

-Aar> today i noticed

Reply to
mountainvolvoguy

wouldn't it "sputter" a bit if it is fuel related? vs. a sudden stop... which would be more electrical related..??...

mounta> The 2 problems are definitely unrelated.

Reply to
~^ beancounter ~^

well that looks like it solves one problem(dieing) but the coolant los looks likes it coming from either the hose or the to of the head. is it hard to change the water pump seal? our dodge crapavan had the timing belt and the water pump some how connected and it cost a bunch of money to fix.thanks

Kasoma Duplantis

Reply to
snpboy

Ah, sounds like the rubber seal between the top of the water pump and the cylinder head has failed: pretty common.

Easy to fix, need not remove cylinder head, just the pump itself.

Reply to
zencraps

Reply to
mountainvolvoguy

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