my cars cooliant

Asked by momscar01 Apr 25, 2013 at 03:23 AM about the Chevrolet Cobalt

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

my car usually stays at 180 for the coolant, but lately the coolant or overheating light
does not come on but the coolant temperature is getting hotter an hotter, I just had an oil
change and the coolant level is at full, why is the coolant temperature getting hot

3 Answers

48,605

How hot is the temp. getting? you could try replacing the thermostat first.

1 people found this helpful.
495

reverse flush the radiator and then flush replace the coolant change okay not //change the thermostat

50,705

Start with the fans on the radiator. Do they come on when the engine gets hot? does the engine act sluggish when it gets hot or make any unusual noises? Can you have a friend or garage mechanic put a temp sensor on the engine to read the temp? Check the radiator cap, make sure it is on tight or even replace it with a new one. If these do not find the problem, then have the radiator flushed if replacing the thermostat does not fix the problem. Do you have a temp. gauge on the dash or an idiot light only? When does the temp go up? In town in heavy traffic or on the highway also? There are a lot of questions as to why your engine maybe overheating.

Your Answer:

Cobalt

Looking for a Used Cobalt in your area?

CarGurus has 13 nationwide Cobalt listings starting at $3,500.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    munron
    Reputation
    8,130
  • #2
    John Carson
    Reputation
    2,270
  • #3
    MoGo
    Reputation
    1,980
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Chevrolet Cruze
68 Great Deals out of 1,131 listings starting at $2,495
Used Chevrolet Impala
9 Great Deals out of 130 listings starting at $4,888
Used Honda Civic
175 Great Deals out of 4,082 listings starting at $440
Used Chevrolet Camaro
13 Great Deals out of 480 listings starting at $11,749
Used Chevrolet Malibu
48 Great Deals out of 1,071 listings starting at $2,495
Used Toyota Corolla
150 Great Deals out of 2,284 listings starting at $2,699
Used Chevrolet Corvette
24 Great Deals out of 667 listings starting at $10,989
Used Ford Mustang
51 Great Deals out of 1,662 listings starting at $5,977
Used Chevrolet Silverado 1500
201 Great Deals out of 8,235 listings starting at $6,995
Used Honda Accord
52 Great Deals out of 997 listings starting at $2,995
Used Chevrolet Colorado
37 Great Deals out of 1,211 listings starting at $4,995
Used Chevrolet HHR
13 listings starting at $3,999
Used Toyota Supra
3 Great Deals out of 56 listings starting at $55,995
Used Toyota Camry
52 Great Deals out of 1,161 listings starting at $4,594

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.