Mazda Repair: Miate (1990) overheating, air coils, radiator cap


Question
Hi, I read on your forum about another person with a similar problem - my 1990 Miata overheats. I replaced with a new Miata thermostat, radiator cap, hoses seems to be fine (not collapsed), bypass hose to waterpump is not clogged, radiator flows nicely when thermostat open, fan comes on fine, waterpump was replaced about 4,000 miles ago when timing belt replaced (orig owner, low mileage - only got 91,000 on it now) . But about 5 minutes after running it, temp creeps up. Also ran it with radiator cap at first notch (not fully closed) - same overheat symptom. In all cases, turning heater on full blast  seems to bring it back down to normal temperature temporarily.
Any other ideas? Could a partially clogged radiator give this symptom?

Answer
Most cooling issues have to do with air flow.  Check that both fans are on (AC on) and that they are pulling air, a bad motor can spin the fan but not have power enough to pull air sufficient to cool.  A weak one is noticeably slower and has less force.  TIP: you can unplug and re-plug each while they are running to see the startup force of the motor.  

Condenser air restriction, clean the air coils.

If you see noticeable flow of coolant then circulation is not likely an issue, though condition of old coolant could give you some insight, either having it boiled out or better yet replacing it with an OEM style new one is even better.  (plastic top and bottom tank, aluminum core - avoid the cheap all metal ones they are trouble)

If your able to cool it down using the heater then air flow and fluid flow are where you need to look.

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