Heater Trouble


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Hey, I've asked at a few automotive forums, but none have provided me with an answer, so I'm going to ask my friends here at Neowin.

My father is having trouble with the heat in his car, whenever he turns it on, it takes like 45 minutes to 1 hour for heat to actually be produced. When the heat is turned on too early then nothing but cold air is blown in. The thermostat was just replaced, and it had no effect on the temperature.

The needle indicating engine temperature is pretty much always at cold, barely fluctuating during the first hour of use. When heat starts getting produced, the needle barely points to "warm", never reaches "hot" like our other cars.

Does anyone know what is causing such a delay and how to fix it?

Thanks alot in advance.

EDIT: Errors.

Edited by Fog Dogg
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Depending on how cold it is, you could cover up the grill on the car with a plastic bag or something to retain the heat (only if the car has an air dam under the front bumper). If it has no air dam, make a small hole in the bag to let some air in. Only do this if the outside temperature is around -5 or less celcius.

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Engine block thermostat is staying open so the motor is not

building up any heat. That explains why it won't warm up until

it is under load for a long time. Homer was right(sort of) the thermostat staying open will cause the coolant to keep flowing around the engine thus not allowing for any heat build up.

Should only cost about $50 to fix.

Edited by keratosis
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