Gage Block
1988 Ford tempo Over heating issue?
I have a 1988 Ford tempo and today in town i started it, drove it half a block after loading a peson in handicapped and got to the light and the eng...
Gage Block

1988 Ford tempo Over heating issue?
I have a 1988 Ford tempo and today in town i started it, drove it half a block after loading a peson in handicapped and got to the light and the engine started smoking as if hot.
I stopped and turn off the car but it almost did not start so I hurry and drove it to a gas station, added water to tank on drivers side and kept air flow to engine.
It made it home but what things can cause the engine to overheat.
the fan was not on.
belts- look ok and tight
thermostat - i dont know where it is.
Fuses - can't find the box and the hot gage is not working on dash.
water pump ? located where and how to check?
anyone with any help please post
If you get smoke coming out of your hood, it is probably not the sensor. Your car was truly overheated. First you need the coolent to be fully circulating to bring the heat away from the engine block. So the thermostat controls the flow. It is usually below the radiator cap. If you want to replace it, make sure your car is completely cool before you open the radiator cap or you will get burn. It is usually very hot. You can actually drive without the thermostat. I have done that in my old car. Your heat just won't be very warm when you don't have the thermostat. If your thermostat is not the problem, make sure your radiator fan is working. First, physically turn the fan with your hand to see if the fan bearing is seized up. If it turns freely, drive your car around the house, stop, leave the engine on and pop to hood to check. If it is not turning wait a while and check again. It should eventually kick on. If it never turned on, you can check the fuse box. You can also hot wire the fan to see if the motor is good. If the motor is bad, it can get expensive.
If your head gasket is blown, you will see a lot of white smoke coming out of your tail pipe. It is a thick white smoke so you won't miss it. Good luck.
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Tags: block 37, gage block
Posted in Calipers & Inspection Guages
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