Your car’s water pump is an important part of your vehicle. It is the part that continually pumps coolant to your vehicle’s engine so that it doesn’t overheat. A leak or a faulty bearing can cause serious damage to your car’s engine. Puddles of coolant underneath your vehicle or high-temperature readings may be signs that your water pump needs replacing.
1. Let your car sit overnight, parked in a garage with a clean concrete floor
If it’s not possible to park it inside on a clean concrete surface, place a piece of light-coloured cardboard underneath your car directly under the motor. Be mindful that water pumps are more likely to leak while the vehicle engine is running, so this is a poor reference for finding a leak.
2. Examine the cardboard the next morning
If it appears to be wet from coolant, you have a leak somewhere, possibly in your water pump, but other sources of leaking coolant could be radiator hoses, heater hoses, freeze plugs, gaskets, or the radiator itself. To narrow the search down, try to place the cardboard directly underneath the water pump itself. If you notice green liquid on the cardboard, it’s antifreeze. This means you have a coolant leak somewhere.
3. Check the water pump pulley
Find the round part at the front of your water pump that the belt is around. Attempt to rock the pulley back and forth. If it seems to be loose, it may be time to replace it, because the bearing is going bad.
4. Listen to your car. Start your car’s engine with the hood up
If you hear a low-pitched grinding noise, it may indicate that your water pump bearing is going bad. You can often hear it plainly if it’s gone bad. You also have similar bearings in your AC compressor, power steering pump, and alternator, so you need to be able to focus on the exact source of the sound, often difficult on a running engine.
5. Look for leaks around the water pump
If you see drops of water or a small stream, you have a leak. Many water pumps have a weep hole in front of the seal that will allow water to leak out if the seal is bad.
6. Notice if your temperature warning light comes on
If your car is not circulating enough coolant due to a leaky or malfunctioning water pump, your engine temperature is going to increase, triggering the warning light.
7. Observe if your low coolant light is glowing
This can be an indicator that your coolant reservoir is leaking or that you have a bad water pump. One other alternative is that there is a leak in the cooling system.
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