Coolant Reservoir Tank

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Coolant Reservoir Frequently Asked Questions

Common signs include coolant smell, visible cracks, yellowed plastic, dried coolant around the seams, low coolant warnings, coolant loss after towing, or residue around the cap and hose connections.

The terms are often used loosely. Ford Powerstroke owners commonly call it a degas bottle, while Ram Cummins and GM Duramax owners usually search for coolant reservoir or coolant overflow tank. Always order by exact vehicle fitment, not by the name alone.

For many older diesel trucks, an aluminum coolant reservoir is chosen because it is stronger against heat-cycle aging, seam cracking, and vibration than the factory plastic tank. It is still important to confirm fitment, cap style, sensor compatibility, and the rest of the cooling system condition before ordering.

Not by itself. An aluminum reservoir mainly replaces a weak plastic tank with a stronger part. It may help stop coolant loss caused by a leaking reservoir, but it does not increase radiator capacity or fix airflow, thermostat, water pump, fan clutch, or head gasket problems.

It can help if overheating or coolant loss is caused by a cracked or leaking plastic tank. It will not fix a bad radiator, thermostat, water pump, fan clutch, weak pressure cap, head gasket issue, or trapped air in the cooling system.

Coolant puking is usually caused by excessive pressure in the cooling system, a weak pressure cap, trapped air, a stuck thermostat, or combustion gases entering the coolant from a head gasket issue. An aluminum tank helps prevent the reservoir itself from cracking, but it will not fix the root cause of over-pressurization.

It depends on the application. Some SPELAB tanks are designed to retain factory coolant level sensor compatibility, while other models use a sight glass or external level tube for visual checks. Always verify the sensor setup on the specific product page before purchasing.

It depends on the application. Some SPELAB aluminum tanks are designed to reuse an OEM-style pressure cap, while other applications may use a custom billet cap or a different cap design. Check the cap style listed on the specific product page before purchasing.

Yes. After replacing a coolant reservoir, refill the system with the correct coolant and bleed air according to the vehicle’s service procedure. Trapped air can cause false overheating symptoms, unstable coolant level readings, or heater performance issues.

Replace hoses if they are swollen, cracked, hardened, oil-soaked, loose at the clamps, or already leaking. A new aluminum tank will not solve a coolant leak caused by old hoses.