"Joey" wrote in message
>
> Ray,
>
> Do you think this mechanic failed to purge the system of air and maybe
> that might be a factor ?
>
> J
>
>
Air in the cooling system is a possibility that is easy enough to check.
The next time you park the car for 4 hours or so, turn the heater control
all the way to hot a minute or two before you turn off the engine. After
the engine has cooled, look at the coolant level in the overflow bottle. It
should be filled to the "cold" mark. If the radiator has a cap, remove it
and take a look inside the neck. The radiator should be filled to the top.
Do not attempt to remove the radiator cap while the engine is warm or you
may get serious burns!
The heater is basically a mini-radiator in the passenger compartment, and
instead of getting rid of heat in the outside air like the radiator does,
the heater core passes its heat to the air flowing into the passenger
compartment. The heater control valve controls the amount of coolant
flowing through the heater core. When you start a cold engine, the coolant
is the same temperature as the ambient air and the rest of the car. It will
take a few minutes for the engine to warm the coolant to 140 degrees or so
and open the thermostat, allowing the coolant to flow through the radiator.
It will actually take a little longer for the coolant to reach operating
temperature if it is flowing through the heater core because it is trying to
give what little heat is built up to the passenger compartment.
IMO, 3 minutes from cold startup to heat flowing from the heater core is not
unreasonable.
--
Ray O
(correct punctuation to reply)
>
> Ray O wrote:
>
>> "john" wrote in message
>>
>>
>>>I just had the coolant replaced on my 2003 Matrix (33k miles) and I
>>>noticed that when I drive my car the heater air is lukewarm for about 3-5
>>>minutes and then abruptly it gets hot. I'm not 100% positive but I think
>>>before I had the coolant replaced, the heater air didn't take *that long*
>>>to get hot. If this is true, I'm guessing that somehow the thermostat is
>>>taking longer to open up. How could changing the coolant have affected
>>>this? Could the mechanic have screwed up something? (I went to an
>>>independent garage).
>>>
>>>Thanks.
>>>
>>>-john
>>>(remove the pachyderm)
>>
>>
>>
>> It is normal to take 3 to 5 minutes for the coolant to get hot enough to
>> be able to heat up the air flowing past the heater core.
>> >> Stay informed about: Heater lukewarm after coolant replaced