Many have asked the sample will be full of sodium ,Not necessarily, OIL PSI is much higher then coolant Pressure if caught soon only the coolant will be contaminate, If the sample contains high levels wear material's replace engine ... But if sodium is found most likely the Oil exchanger was weeping maybe weeks before complete failure...So wear resulted prior to failure and this should be covered with complete engine and all supporting hardware under warranty.
The only way to know 100% if sodium is found is to remove engine and inspect Cam, Bearings Rod/Main and all rotating mass for wear.
You realize the OE coolant is not ethylene glycol don't you? That's the green stuff. We have Oat coolant. Hoat specifically. There's no ethylene glycol contentGet OA Oil sample ASAP if coolant is found in oil .
Another potentially huge problem to be aware of is the reaction of calcium sulfonate (engine oil detergent) with ethylene glycol (engine coolant). When these fluids are mixed, a chemical reaction ensues that produces small abrasive balls as a byproduct. These "oil balls" are between 5 and 40 microns in size. The significance of the size is that this is also the size of the fluid film. In essence what is produced is a sandpaper balls that fits perfectly into the clearance between the engine’s internal components. The results are severe wear and eventual failure.
If Your Running MS11106 it has high levels of calcium.
You realize the OE coolant is not ethylene glycol don't you? That's the green stuff. We have Oat coolant. Hoat specifically. There's no ethylene glycol content
My 2015 diesel supplement says I have OAT coolant. It also says not to mix with HOAT. I do not think I have HOAT in my 2015 Ram!!! I hate when people just put out info off the top of their head, rather than what manual says.You realize the OE coolant is not ethylene glycol don't you? That's the green stuff. We have Oat coolant. Hoat specifically. There's no ethylene glycol content
Well my mistake. I was pretty sure all the organics did not but I was wrongI have a bottle of our OEM coolant and it says it contains Ethylene glycol.
Why was your warranty not honored?They declined my warranty claim so I fixed it myself. All I did was replace the oil cooler and the reservoir then flushed everything about 5 times. Now it depends on how much water got into the oil system but usally if it's enough to wash the bearings it well also cause crankcase pressure. That well cause a cel immediately in my cause I didn't get any cel.
Sorry I know this post is old but I'm a newb to the forum and ED. I purchased a used 2014 laramie longhorn in April with 149,000 miles and a GDE tune that has been in since 132,000 miles. Just got a cel and when checked it was the coolant bypass valve stuck code. Upon lifting hood noticed the coolant recovery tank looked nasty with obvious contamination. Not sure what to do first. Still replace bypass valve or do new cooler, valve and flush system?Because I tuned and deleted my truck.
Ok. I was going to stop at dealer this morning and try to get an estimate for cooler. Do you have one recommended? Or has OEM one been upgraded? Any ideas on cost? Just parts even? My dealer is fairly small here in the northwest and last time I stopped there to ask them about possibly changing tranny fluid they acted like they haven't seen hardly any ecodiesels in their service department. Certainly none with the mileage I have.Welcome, sorry to hear that a problem prompted your post!
The bypass valve code may be a red-herring. I would replace the cooler and flush the system and see if that code returns.