OK, this is driving me a bit nuts. I've driven my '89 for 14 years and thought I've seen it all. Just turned 200,000 miles and the car has been great. Other than normal maintenance stuff (which I do mostly myself), never had any serious problems. The engine has never been opened up. So here's the deal. About 3 weeks ago, I had a "Low Coolant" light come on. I did a pressure check on the radiator and found a pinhole in a heater hose, which I promptly fixed. I pressure checked again and it held fine. Over the following days, the warning light came on a few times after and I thought that I just had air trapped, so I did all the tricks to get the system full. After days and days of refilling and trying every trick in the book, I realized that the coolant was going somewhere. No visable leaks. The weird thing is that it seems like the system is getting air in but it never draws any fluid back from the overflow tank. In fact, if I force fill it, the "Low Coolant" light comes on and the overflow tank overfills and spills. OK, logic says that the head gasket is leaking and pressurizing the system with gases. No water in the oil. It runs fine, except for a faultering idle just once and awhile (mild and not unusual). So I spent all day today doing a compression check. All cylinders measured between 155 to 165 psi. Differentials between adjacent cylinders did not exceed 5 psi. So why am I having this problem? Can air be pumped into the cooling system any other way? Can a small pinhole leak or crack cause this but not show up on the compression test? Other than tearing the engine down, how else can I troubleshoot it?





