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Old 09-22-2024, 12:23 PM   #1
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Join Date: Sep 2024
Location: Austin, TX
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First Porsche

'99 with stock 2.5L
Just getting to know the car and looking forward to sharing more in the forum.
It needs some work and this is the best resource I've found.

Thanks!

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Old 09-22-2024, 12:34 PM   #2
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Location: Austin, TX
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So... The Mystery... Head Gasket?

(Can't seem to post, so trying as a response to my own post)

'99 Boxter 2.5L, 62k mi - New to me, I'm now the 4th owner.

Background, I purchased it from a 'relative' of the owner and based on Carfax it had not been driven over 200 miles in 3 years. The grandson in charge of selling the car for the owner spoke of a small coolant leak and overheating, a horn stuck on, and otherwise in seemingly excellent condition. Service done professionally on regular basis and major services every 15k mi.

Got to work. Fixed the horn, replaced water pump, thermostat, changed all fluids, pumped out the bad gas and replaced the fuel filter. Did everything else on the 60k checklist. Surprised there did not appear to be a gasket on the thermostat. Also the water pump and thermostat had a lot of calcium build-up as though someone was replenishing coolant with tap water?! [Terrifying]

So I tested CLR on the calcium from the old water pump and it worked quite well. So I flushed the entire cooling system with CLR to try and remove any deposits from the system with an external rig I put together for 2 hours. Then flushed the entire system again with distilled water. Cleaned radiators and refilled with coolant. No leaks after 24 hours… so far so good.

But after a thorough bleed of the system, the overheating didn't go away. In fact it seemed to get worse. The bleed valve in the trunk was opening at temp on its own and I noticed bubbles in the coolant. After scratching my head for days, I did an exhaust / coolant fluid test which revealed my worst fear - hydrocarbons in the coolant. (Head gasket or worse a crack!)

I left the entire coolant system under pressure (lots of build-up and held until you open the radiator cap or bleed valve.) Then I pulled all the spark plugs and did a compression test.
- US Passenger side (4,5,6) all show 180 psi.
- US Driver Side (1,2,3) show 60 psi, 60 psi, 100 psi.

So I peeked inside with a borescope. I can see fluid in the cylinders and bubbling at the head gasket inside cylinders 1,2,3.

So the question…. Based on this history, would you pull the heads on only the driver side, replace the gasket and give it a go (assuming a visual inspection does not reveal an obvious crack?)

Right now I’m thinking of attempting the ‘replace the gasket in-place’ approach outlined here:
Blown Head—how to repair?

….
Looking for advice because I’m not sure what question to ask!

Thanks,
Erik
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Old 09-22-2024, 12:51 PM   #3
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Join Date: Sep 2018
Location: Illinois
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Welcome!
If you stay with maintenance, you'll love it!
I have a newer 911 and some BMWs and the 99 Boxster is my favorite driver. It's great fun when the road has turns, but is comfortable for long trips.
Enjoy!
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Old 09-22-2024, 01:07 PM   #4
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Posted my first question over an hour ago but it says moderator must approve. Do you know how long it generally takes to get my first question post approved? I know it’s Sunday and don’t expect immediate review… just confused by the way the form message after the post and no reference in my profile page. (Just learning on my part.)

I did end up attempting posting multiple times (newbie over achiever) but got same message each time.

Thanks!
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Old 09-24-2024, 01:05 PM   #5
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Join Date: Jul 2024
Location: Canada
Posts: 19
I'm new as well, also new to Porsche and bought my first boxster.
Really loving this car, as the best driving experience I've had.
Doing lots of maintenance also and this forum is a great resource.

Seems like the first week or two my posts had some administrative limitations, but now it seems fine so just a matter of time until a moderator gets you going.
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Old 09-26-2024, 09:10 PM   #6
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Welcome to the team!
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Old 09-27-2024, 06:21 AM   #7
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Sorry to hear that.
To properly evaluate, you should really just drop the engine.
It's so tight in there it will be very frustrating...and slow. It is really not that hard to remove it, and I suggest dropping with the transmission as it simplifies a lot.
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Old 10-04-2024, 01:31 AM   #8
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Drop engine, remove heads and check what's going on.

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