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got my pantera back on the road for the first time since I purchased it. First time it has been on the road in 26 years. New custom radiator, 2 spal sucker fans, all new coolant etc. Did a few 10 mile test runs and no issues. Third time out, about 20 miles and just as I pulled over at home she puked coolant all over. Temp guage wasn't spiked however it was pushing coolant out from beneath the pressure cap. I've read a ton of the posts re cooling and I'm not sure which way to head with this. I'm thinking about replacing the cap first. It is old. all comments welcome and considered. Thanks...
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Sounds like the system lost pressure. Most likely it is the pressure cap but you should pressure test the system to see if it will hold it.

Just don't presume it is only the cap.

Stant makes a little kit for around $120 that will pressure test the cap and the system too.

It's worth the investment. Works on all cars.

A lot of times if it isn't the cap, it is the flange on the tank the cap seals too.

You can't usually tell on the cap by just looking at it. You have to pressure test it.

They can be bad brand new out of the box.
Last edited by panteradoug
Johnnek, as Doug mentioned, if the car has a stock pressure tank, the neck was originally sized for a European radiator cap which is about 0.060" longer than U.S-made caps. The extra length reduces cap pressure ratings from the cap's built-in spring, so a 16lb U.S cap may leak at only 6-8 lbs of pressure. In addition, the bottoms of the necks are usually quite rough making sealing all but a brand new cap iffy, so the spit-up does not go into the overflow tank.
Fix: take the small tank to any radiator shop and have them remove the OEM neck & solder on a U.S made neck, with a smooth finish at the bottom. I don't recommend using more than 16lb caps as it can encourage overpressurizing the radiator and leaking. Even the best aftermarket street rads are only tested/rated to about 20 psi.

Second chore: when a pressure cap lets go as yours did, the overflow tends to run down the tank, down the inner fender panel and right into the oval lightening hole in the top of the right frame rail. There is no outlet unless you or someone else has drilled the recommended 3 holes per side in the frame rail bottoms. Undrilled rails are usually full of small rocks, dirt and much rust from collected water. I've pulled bolts and broken spark plug ends from some using a magnet. Driving in the rain will fill the rails up to the top with water. Three 1/2" OD holes more-or-less evenly spaced along the rails are all that's needed; some of us also drill 3/8" holes in the extreme bottom legs of the horse-shoe-shaped steel stamping that supports the rear a-arms, for the same reason. The truly paranoid then dump a couple of qts of drain oil in the top holes, with plugs in the drilled holes. Let the oil set for 1/2 day, then drain it: cheap rustproofing!
Pressure test the system first. If it won't hold more than 6-8 with the cap on, try adding an additional rubber gasket to the bottom of the cap.

Loctite makes a great industrial strength glue that will hold the thing in place. In fact it will literally bond itself to the other gasket.

That should make up for the difference in the length of the spring assembly.

If not. Plan B. Change the neck on the tank.

Mine works fine with the extra gasket.

Seems I put the cart before the horse on this issue.

I had my tanks chromed before I detected an inequity (a problem).

16 psi is all you need. It should positively solve overheating issues and you know what?

I'll bet you a nickle that all these Panteras that overheat just need a good cap?

Seems NO ONE EVER looks for that?
Thanks Doug:

I like the simple route and often times, it is the simple solution that works. I"ll try the extra gasket first. Have never heard that suggested on this forum. Thanks for the suggestion and I"ll let you know…unfortunately not until the spring though…
[
QUOTE]Originally posted by PanteraDoug:
Pressure test the system first. If it won't hold more than 6-8 with the cap on, try adding an additional rubber gasket to the bottom of the cap.

Loctite makes a great industrial strength glue that will hold the thing in place. In fact it will literally bond itself to the other gasket.

That should make up for the difference in the length of the spring assembly.

If not. Plan B. Change the neck on the tank.

Mine works fine with the extra gasket.

Seems I put the cart before the horse on this issue.

I had my tanks chromed before I detected an inequity (a problem).

16 psi is all you need. It should positively solve overheating issues and you know what?

I'll bet you a nickle that all these Panteras that overheat just need a good cap?

Seems NO ONE EVER looks for that?[/QUOTE]
Let's back up the train here. What was your process when you filled the cooling system ? If there is no coolant around the sensor, there will be no reading.

Was the motor running?

Was the rad bled?

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