Like I was asking earlier, I think you may be mixing up some of your terms and measurements. Vacuum is the opposite of pressure. So are you sure you are pulling a vacuum, aka putting the system under negative pressure? In that case, you are not actually testing your coolant system properly. It needs to be under positive pressure, NOT a vacuum. However, any coolant test tool I'm aware of creates positive pressure, so I suspect you're just misusing the term "vacuum."Meine44 wrote: Sun Mar 29, 2026 2:54 pm I received the new gauge for the coolant vacuum tool, and tested it on the car today. It will get to 15 in-Hg of vacuum pressure before coolant starts coming out of the venturi hose.
I left the system under 15 in-Hg of vacuum pressure for 10 minutes and the pressure didn't bleed off, so the system must be sealed. This gives me a fair bit of confidence that there are no leaks on the system. I will plan to bleed the system at the vent and top off with distilled water as needed before driving the car home from storage.
Also, 15 in-Hg is only about 7psi. If you ARE in fact pressurizing the system, then this is only about half of the pressure it needs to take. You need to pressurize it to 15psi/30in-hg (which is what your OE coolant blowoff cap should be). If you are experiencing leaks at 7psi/15in-hg (again, of *positive* pressure) then that is your problem - it will leak under normal operating coolant system pressures.
