Trebor English
Well-known member
My first wife's 2006 Pontiac Torrent, similar to Chevy Equinox, had a head gasket failure. According to the interwebs this 3.4 liter V6 has this failure often. First a freeze plug leak caused a low coolant level, that caused an overheat, then the coolant had lots of bubbles and it used a pint of coolant per day with lots of steam in the exhaust. The repair estimate was $2300 plus, if necessary, rebuilt heads at $500 each.
I used Bar's head gasket repair HG-1 and that fixed it. So far it has been only two days and I know that this fix may not be as reliable as new heads, gaskets, etc. It is, however, working and the price is under $50. I know people who have the disparaging opinion that such products are not good and only the "real" fix should be used. It is my opinion that a 10 year old car worth $2500 (according to KBB) probably ought not get the $2300 repair without trying the $50 repair first. A new vehicle under warranty should get a new gasket installed by the dealer, out of warranty I think this is the way to go.
I am pleased that the fix is holding but not really surprised. On the box it says that the product is intended for engines that can idle for 15 minutes without overheating or having to add coolant. This engine met the requirements. The fix works. Just in case, keep your receipt. The product has a warranty. If it fails, money back or replacement product.
The product web page is http://barsleaks.com/product/blown-head-gasket-repair/
Since it was driven a lot with the exhaust passing through the coolant there was a lot of ugly stuff in there. I started with Bar's cooling system cleaner flush product. The oily mess might have kept the HG-1 from sealing. The cleaning and flushing took about 2 hours. Draining a quart of water and adding HG-1 by itself would be under an hour.
I used Bar's head gasket repair HG-1 and that fixed it. So far it has been only two days and I know that this fix may not be as reliable as new heads, gaskets, etc. It is, however, working and the price is under $50. I know people who have the disparaging opinion that such products are not good and only the "real" fix should be used. It is my opinion that a 10 year old car worth $2500 (according to KBB) probably ought not get the $2300 repair without trying the $50 repair first. A new vehicle under warranty should get a new gasket installed by the dealer, out of warranty I think this is the way to go.
I am pleased that the fix is holding but not really surprised. On the box it says that the product is intended for engines that can idle for 15 minutes without overheating or having to add coolant. This engine met the requirements. The fix works. Just in case, keep your receipt. The product has a warranty. If it fails, money back or replacement product.
The product web page is http://barsleaks.com/product/blown-head-gasket-repair/
Since it was driven a lot with the exhaust passing through the coolant there was a lot of ugly stuff in there. I started with Bar's cooling system cleaner flush product. The oily mess might have kept the HG-1 from sealing. The cleaning and flushing took about 2 hours. Draining a quart of water and adding HG-1 by itself would be under an hour.