Should water pump be replaced if gasket is leaking?

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JamesLond

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I thought the pump was leaking from the weep hole, but after closer inspection, there's coolant seeping out at the bottom where it mates to the engine. I don't know the history of this pump nor if it's OEM.
 

mattbta

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Well, you've got to take the pump off to change the gaskets and it's a wear item with reasonable cost. Makes sense to replace, as long as whatever is on there is properly torqued and still leaking.
 

SnowDrifter

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I mean, ideally yes.

But these things are so damn easy to do... You could honestly get away with just a gasket swap. Takes longer waiting for the thing to warm up to check the t-stat than it does to actually do the job.

Get the good rubber-impregnated-metal ones from fel-pro. Prep the surfaces well, dab of o-ring grease on install, and torque to first 11ftlbs, then 22ftlbs. Don't use RTV. The only exception to that is if the surfaces are super pitted, in which case, you'd use paper gaskets with a very thin coat of RTV. But again... only IF needed.
 

MassHoe04

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Another vote for Fel-Pro. They are my first choice for any gasket replacement. I followed their instructions verbatim, cleaning both surfaces extra good and suing the Fel-Pro gasket dry with nothing added. I did a Fel-Pro gasket on the water pump, valve covers and timing cover for my 05 Jeep. Bare gaskets. Perfect seals!

I didn't do o-ring or silicone-based grease as @SnowDrifter does, but I am willing to bet he has more experience than I do. Since it is silicone-based, it would not harm the silicone seal on the gasket, so that sounds OK to me. Does it keep the seal from cracking or drying out?
 

Blackcar

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If I read this right, it is seeping which before replacing in my own vehicles would try powder stop leak tablets first and put them in and run it for a long time (when I was going to run errands to circulate well) and if it didn't stop seeping change out pump. Also, you might want to check or replace pressure cap on tank.
 

SnowDrifter

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Another vote for Fel-Pro. They are my first choice for any gasket replacement. I followed their instructions verbatim, cleaning both surfaces extra good and suing the Fel-Pro gasket dry with nothing added. I did a Fel-Pro gasket on the water pump, valve covers and timing cover for my 05 Jeep. Bare gaskets. Perfect seals!

I didn't do o-ring or silicone-based grease as @SnowDrifter does, but I am willing to bet he has more experience than I do. Since it is silicone-based, it would not harm the silicone seal on the gasket, so that sounds OK to me. Does it keep the seal from cracking or drying out?
automotive gaskets are typically made from nitrile, fwiw.

Not trying to be pedantic when I say that. You can find the odd silicone based gasket if you look hard, or silicone radiator hose kits. The significance being: you wouldn't want to use a silicone grease on a silicone item. Remember our... early education when they were warning us not to use silicone under certain situations under the covers? Same gig here. BUT, nitrile is compatible with silicone oils/greases.


I use it because I've found it lessens the likelihood of a gasket tearing on install. Lets it move and shift around and settle in. Not really important on a water pump. But some gaskets really need to be able to shift and move around on install and you can crease them if you're not careful. Does nothing for gasket life though. It's just a habit I've picked up. Ensure stress load is in Z direction for the gasket, not X,Y.

Put a dab of silicone on it, wipe it off. If it feels greasy, wipe it again. It truly does NOT take much. It's there to help it slide and settle into place, not gunk things up or act as a sealing agent.

Stricly speaking, you could use some antifreeze concentrate (slipprier than 50/50) and get the same result. But I just hate getting glycol on my hands.
 

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