Coolant Leaks
Concise coolant leak path for pressure testing, hose/radiator/water pump separation, and estimate handoff.
Use the symptom as the starting point, then confirm likely causes with checks, OBD context, and repair guides before estimating or replacing parts.
Coolant leaks should be pressure-tested and located before parts are priced, because radiator, hose, pump, cap, and thermostat-housing leaks can look similar from above or below.
Common Sounds or Signs
- Sweet coolant smell after parking
- Low coolant warning or repeated top-offs
- Drips under the front of the vehicle
- Steam or residue near hose ends, radiator tanks, or water pump
Quick Checks
- Pressure test the system cold and inspect with good lighting
- Check radiator tanks, hose ends, clamps, cap, and reservoir
- Inspect water pump weep hole and pulley area
- Look for overheating history before approving a simple leak repair
Inspection Priority
- Verify coolant level and condition first.
- Inspect thermostat behavior and circulation evidence together.
- Pressure test the cooling system when coolant loss or smell is present.
Diagnostic Path
Use these paths to decide what to inspect first, what failures overlap, and when the repair is ready to estimate.
External Leak Path
Find the first wet point before replacing parts downstream from the leak trail.
- Pressure test and trace the highest wet area
- Inspect hoses and clamps while the system is pressurized
- Check radiator tank seams and cap behavior
Overheat Risk Path
If coolant loss caused overheating, verify fan, thermostat, and circulation before closing the quote.
- Confirm fan operation at idle
- Check thermostat behavior and heater output
- Bleed air and recheck pressure after repair
Related OBD Codes
Move into code lookup when a scan tool confirms one of these faults, then use the code page to separate misfire, lean, EVAP, cooling, or charging causes before pricing the repair.
- P0128 - Coolant thermostat below regulating temperature
Recommended Next Repair Paths
Compare likely repair paths before replacing parts. Cost guides and estimates are strongest after symptoms, checks, code evidence, and repair-guide logic point in the same direction.
Radiator Replacement
Use when pressure testing confirms tank, seam, or core leakage.
Diagnostic Tools
Use TorqueMech diagnostic flow to move from symptom checking into code context, likely causes, and repair guide confirmation.
Open Diagnostic Tools →Need a Quick Estimate?
Open the estimator when the likely repair path is known and you are ready to compare labor, parts, and customer-ready quote context.
Continue Estimate →