Re: 1940 Packard 120 Club Coup - the restoration journey begins
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Quite a regular
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Here is another interesting fact I learned about the 1940 120 Packards. The owner's preliminary shop manual says the radiator cap should have four pounds pressure. These caps do not appear to exist anywhere. However, John Ulrich listed a couple of original no pressure radiator caps on E-Bay and Max Merritt lists a no pressure cap replacement cap. When asked, John said Packard didn't have pressureized caps until 1941. My 1940 Super Eight lists the cap pressure to be seven pounds in the owners manual. Now I am wondering about my Super Eight!
Posted on: 8/16 12:14
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Re: 1940 Packard 120 Club Coup - the restoration journey begins
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Home away from home
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After having the radiator neck changed on my 1940 110 many years ago so that it would accept a modern cap, I still have the original. In any event, I recall reading about it being 4 lbs but not sure how as I don't recall it having any find of pressure spring and seal. I do now that it you try to put even a slightly higher pressure cape on it you'll risk damaging the radiator as the upper tank is too large to accept any sort of pressure without bulging noticeably.
Posted on: 8/16 12:28
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Re: 1940 Packard 120 Club Coup - the restoration journey begins
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Webmaster
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Check where the overflow tube connects. If it's below whee the cap seal sits, then its non-pressurized and the cap rating makes no difference since it's venting below the cap seal.
It it's above the cap seal, the it's a pressurized radiator.
Posted on: 8/16 16:47
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-BigKev
1954 Packard Clipper Deluxe Touring Sedan -> Registry | Project Blog 1937 Packard 115-C Convertible Coupe -> Registry | Project Blog |
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