SnowDrifter
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YepUse a combustion gas tester on the cooling system. Only costs about $50.
And the other, noninvasive test I'd do, before do much as taking a bolt off: Is to grab an oil sample and send it off for analysis.
Gas check looks for, I believe CO2, which triggers a color change. You can blow fresh air through it until the color changes back to re-use it later, for what it's worth.
Also, regarding coolant schmoo: if, IF it's a combustion chamber link, one of the other things to look for is rapid pressurization of the system w/ key on and/or fluctuating cooling system pressure corresponding to manifold vacuum i.e. quickly revving it
<cheeky>
also: dude screw all that fix in a bottle stuff. If you need it to run short term or flip it (what are morals), sure. If you plan on keeping the rig - just do it right. No bottle fix is permanent. And *every* bottle fix comes with drawbacks. Sure, it'll seal the leak. But it'll also plug the heater core, rad, and thermostat (jiggle pin at a minimum). It'll also cause abrasive wear on your water pump seals. Or maybe it leaks in the oil. Mmmmmmmm abrasives in a hydraulic sytem
Besides... Assuming it does 'fix' it, that then affects your ability to perform future diagnoses.
</cheeky>
Oh, and fun fact I discovered with reading and testing: Ya know what happens when the heater core plugs on these rigs? They'll overheat. But they'll do so in a highly localized manner that won't necessarily reflect on the temp gauge. You'll see some increased temps if you have a digital readout, but even then, it'll only look on the high side of normal. Nothing that will give you any red flags until you turn the key off and listen closely.. Then you'll hear coolant boiling.
So yeah.... I'd evaluate very carefully before you start trying quick fixes.
Diagnose first. Then evaluate course of options.