i30 Owners Club

Oil Cooler Replacement i30 2009 1.6crdi

chrisnka · 35 · 13002

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
Roughly how much should it cost to have the oil cooler tested and replaced if a leak is found. We have been quoted £244 plus parts. Oil in coolant and head gasket passed the test.
  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
Roughly how much should it cost to have the oil cooler tested and replaced if a leak is found. We have been quoted £244 plus parts. Oil in coolant and head gasket passed the test.
Is this a manual or auto?
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield

Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
No experience with the cooler, could it be simply the gasket or the could be O-rings

Cooler to filter body
1 x 263132A500 (26313-2A500) - O-RING CENTER PIPE
2 x 263142A500 (26314-2A500) - SEAL-OIL

Filter body to block
1 x 263112A510 (26311-2A510) - GASKET-OIL FILTER

entire filter assembly

If you get that,should include all items in that window, seals gaskets filter element, then cooler is separate item to bolt on

263102A510 (26310-2A510) - FILTER ASSY-OIL


:link: Genuine Kia Sportage/Rio/Ceed/ Oil filter assy 263102A510



264102A300



:link: KIA SPORTAGE 1 SL 2010-2014 2WD 1.7 CRDI OIL COOLER 264102A300 | eBay



:link: Oil Filter Housing Hyundai ix35 Tucson TLE 1,7 CRDi D4FD 26410-2A300 EN236563 | eBay

  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
It's a manual
excludes possibilty of trans fluid then.
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
also wonder since filter body is plastic is a crack in that could lead to oil entering the water piping


Price wise you'll just have to use those part numbers and work it out.

That filter body assembly might be good value regardless in the long run
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
We have had the head gasket checked.

The garage carried out a test and it passed that so we can rule the gasket out. Hey pretty sure the engine itself is fine after that.

He has said there's no visual signs of leakage on the oil cooler however it could be internal hence the reason for sending that away to get pressure tested.

I'm really hoping it does come back as the cooler and get to the bottom of it. Can't afford to throw money at different parts.

Thanks for the very detailed information and I'll pass it on if the pressure test on the oil cooler comes back clean.

  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich


  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline nzenigma

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,070

    • au Australia
      QLD
Roughly how much should it cost to have the oil cooler tested and replaced if a leak is found. We have been quoted £244 plus parts. Oil in coolant and head gasket passed the test.

Simple and cheap remedy is to go to a wrecker and get another one. Easy enough to fit DIY.

If head gasket was passed, presume that was due to a cooling system pressure test, which should have picked up a leak in the cooler.
« Last Edit: August 04, 2018, 22:34:12 by nzenigma »
  • FD 2.0L CW (office); GD 1.8L & CRDi; BMW Z3 M; Audi A4 Quattro; Nissan 350Z HR


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
It was a Hydrocarbon test they did for the head gasket so I'm not sure if that would have pulled the oil cooler up. I'm no mechanic though.
  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
It was a Hydrocarbon test they did for the head gasket so I'm not sure if that would have pulled the oil cooler up. I'm no mechanic though.
Interesting, anything like this?

:link: Hydrocarbon Testing for Blown Head Gasket - YouTube
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
I wasn't there to witness it but yes that's the test.



  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
What's interesting is you guys get a plastic body, ours is alloy, wonder why? Tolerances in extreme cold?


  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
I am interested too. At the end of the day I am also hoping it is the cause as if it isn't I suppose it could then be pointing to a crack in the head or block which we don't want. I'm not sure if the hydrocarbon test would have picked this up or not.



  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline nzenigma

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,070

    • au Australia
      QLD
What's interesting is you guys get a plastic body, ours is alloy, wonder why? Tolerances in extreme cold?

Possibly its a Czech unit and Korean are different. The plastic units are on BMW etc.
  • FD 2.0L CW (office); GD 1.8L & CRDi; BMW Z3 M; Audi A4 Quattro; Nissan 350Z HR


Offline nzenigma

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,070

    • au Australia
      QLD
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
I am interested too. At the end of the day I am also hoping it is the cause as if it isn't I suppose it could then be pointing to a crack in the head or block which we don't want. I'm not sure if the hydrocarbon test would have picked this up or not.

Yes, Will be interesting. To my knowledge, the water only flows through the metal cooler, the plastic part has no water galley. ???  :undecided:
The hydrocarbon test simply demonstrated two knowns: 1.  the Jeep diesel motor is to be avoided.
2.  Gas bubbles appear at the coolant filling point ( radiator or bottle cap) if there is an internal leak, the same thing is achieved by filling that cooling unit to the brim with water and watching for bubbles.
  • FD 2.0L CW (office); GD 1.8L & CRDi; BMW Z3 M; Audi A4 Quattro; Nissan 350Z HR


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
I am interested too. At the end of the day I am also hoping it is the cause as if it isn't I suppose it could then be pointing to a crack in the head or block which we don't want. I'm not sure if the hydrocarbon test would have picked this up or not.

Yes, Will be interesting. To my knowledge, the water only flows through the metal cooler, the plastic part has no water galley. ???  :undecided:
The hydrocarbon test simply demonstrated two knowns: 1.  the Jeep diesel motor is to be avoided.
2.  Gas bubbles appear at the coolant filling point ( radiator or bottle cap) if there is an internal leak, the same thing is achieved by filling that cooling unit to the brim with water and watching for bubbles.
That makes no sense. There's 2 oil ports  and 1 water in that cooler body, if water goes in it has to go out so it does go through the filter assembly . whether is possible for the casing to fail and lead to the mix?
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
This is my interpretation,



  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline nzenigma

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,070

    • au Australia
      QLD
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
I am interested too. At the end of the day I am also hoping it is the cause as if it isn't I suppose it could then be pointing to a crack in the head or block which we don't want. I'm not sure if the hydrocarbon test would have picked this up or not.

Yes, Will be interesting. To my knowledge, the water only flows through the metal cooler, the plastic part has no water galley. ???  :undecided:
The hydrocarbon test simply demonstrated two knowns: 1.  the Jeep diesel motor is to be avoided.
2.  Gas bubbles appear at the coolant filling point ( radiator or bottle cap) if there is an internal leak, the same thing is achieved by filling that cooling unit to the brim with water and watching for bubbles.
That makes no sense. There's 2 oil ports  and 1 water in that cooler body, if water goes in it has to go out so it does go through the filter assembly . whether is possible for the casing to fail and lead to the mix?
That makes even less sense.
Cooler has  oil in & out ( "2 oil ports") " and 1 water",  you assume water flows 'in and out ' of the cooler  and assume that the flow is via the filter body. How can it get in and out of the filter body if water ports do not exist?
  • FD 2.0L CW (office); GD 1.8L & CRDi; BMW Z3 M; Audi A4 Quattro; Nissan 350Z HR


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
I am interested too. At the end of the day I am also hoping it is the cause as if it isn't I suppose it could then be pointing to a crack in the head or block which we don't want. I'm not sure if the hydrocarbon test would have picked this up or not.

Yes, Will be interesting. To my knowledge, the water only flows through the metal cooler, the plastic part has no water galley. ???  :undecided:
The hydrocarbon test simply demonstrated two knowns: 1.  the Jeep diesel motor is to be avoided.
2.  Gas bubbles appear at the coolant filling point ( radiator or bottle cap) if there is an internal leak, the same thing is achieved by filling that cooling unit to the brim with water and watching for bubbles.
That makes no sense. There's 2 oil ports  and 1 water in that cooler body, if water goes in it has to go out so it does go through the filter assembly . whether is possible for the casing to fail and lead to the mix?
That makes even less sense.
Cooler has  oil in & out ( "2 oil ports") " and 1 water",  you assume water flows 'in and out ' of the cooler  and assume that the flow is via the filter body. How can it get in and out of the filter body if water ports do not exist?
have you looked at my last image yet?
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline nzenigma

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,070

    • au Australia
      QLD
If we assume it's in this area that the contamination is occurring if I had to guess which part my gut tells me the plastic body is more likely to deteriorate and hairline fracture than the cooling element.

It will be interesting to see where this ends.
I am interested too. At the end of the day I am also hoping it is the cause as if it isn't I suppose it could then be pointing to a crack in the head or block which we don't want. I'm not sure if the hydrocarbon test would have picked this up or not.

Yes, Will be interesting. To my knowledge, the water only flows through the metal cooler, the plastic part has no water galley. ???  :undecided:
The hydrocarbon test simply demonstrated two knowns: 1.  the Jeep diesel motor is to be avoided.
2.  Gas bubbles appear at the coolant filling point ( radiator or bottle cap) if there is an internal leak, the same thing is achieved by filling that cooling unit to the brim with water and watching for bubbles.
That makes no sense. There's 2 oil ports  and 1 water in that cooler body, if water goes in it has to go out so it does go through the filter assembly . whether is possible for the casing to fail and lead to the mix?
That makes even less sense.
Cooler has  oil in & out ( "2 oil ports") " and 1 water",  you assume water flows 'in and out ' of the cooler  and assume that the flow is via the filter body. How can it get in and out of the filter body if water ports do not exist?
have you looked at my last image yet?
Yes, I see your faux pas.   :whistler:
Cooler has 2 water ports.
Therefore @chrisnka  cannot be sure which unit is leaking. The plastic will probably be more expensive new. Best to go to a wrecker and get the whole unit with cooler attached.
  • FD 2.0L CW (office); GD 1.8L & CRDi; BMW Z3 M; Audi A4 Quattro; Nissan 350Z HR


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich


I've highlighted the water points on the filter body

It's  cheaper than the cooler element if that unit I linked on Ebay is purchased

A used one is a worthy option, also linked a very cheap one 15GBP plus the same assembly is used on a multitude of models including the 1.7L CRDi

  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich








« Last Edit: August 05, 2018, 00:41:33 by tw2005 »
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
So it is the oil cooler that is causing the problem. A new one from hyundai is £190!!! Total cost £560!!!! It is an expensive repair.



  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
He hasn't said which part of the oil cooler that has failed as its still at the testing centre. I will try to find out though



  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
So it is the oil cooler that is causing the problem. A new one from hyundai is £190!!! Total cost £560!!!! It is an expensive repair.
I'd be giving a used one a go or use the part number  and order from koraps in korea if you can wait
  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
They will only use new parts at the garage its in. I've contacted hyundai directly who confirmed the parts price at that. We are just going to go with it anyway but I was certainly not expecting it to cost that much that's for sure. I'm sure if we took it to a backstreet garage it would have been less but may have been an old 2nd hand part with no guarantee so I suppose it is what it is.



  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Offline tw2005

  • Top Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 4,362

    • au Australia
      Ipswich
They will only use new parts at the garage its in. I've contacted hyundai directly who confirmed the parts price at that. We are just going to go with it anyway but I was certainly not expecting it to cost that much that's for sure. I'm sure if we took it to a backstreet garage it would have been less but may have been an old 2nd hand part with no guarantee so I suppose it is what it is.
Bummer, just did a cost comparison if you ordered the part ex Korea.

IN GBP
30.57 part
0.91 3% duty

22  shipping

53.49 sub total
10.7 VAT

64.19 total to your door if I have the correct info on your duties and taxes foir the cooler and you'd also want to order those O-Rings









  • i40 Premium Tourer, FD i30CW SLX CRDi FD i30 CRDi SX , Welly, SANTA CLAUS


Offline chrisnka

  • 2nd Gear
  • *
    • Posts: 40

    • gb United Kingdom
      Huddersfield
It's crazy the price difference. It does say upto 2 weeks for delivery, we don't have time to wait unfortunately but I will definitely keep this site in mind as we are going to need a new clutch soon. Might be a bit more costly.

Thanks for the information though its invaluable



  • 2009 Hyundai i30 1.6 Comfort CRDI


Unread Posts

 


SimplePortal 2.3.5 © 2008-2012, SimplePortal