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Kenworth T660 Expansion Tank

2 items

Coolant expansion tank cracks can cause leaks, low coolant warnings, and overheating. Replace a worn reservoir tank with A-Premium and keep your cooling system protected.

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Shop coolant expansion tanks and engine coolant reservoirs by vehicle. The right tank gives heated coolant room to expand and provides a place to monitor the level, but layouts differ across cooling systems. Use the year, make, model, engine, and product notes to compare tank shape, hose ports, mounting points, and included components before ordering. Never open the cooling system while the engine is hot.

What Does a Coolant Expansion Tank Do?

As coolant warms, its volume increases. Depending on the vehicle's design, an expansion tank or reservoir receives the changing coolant volume and helps the system maintain the correct operating level. Many tanks have MIN/MAX or COLD-FILL marks so the level can be checked without opening the system. The tank is only one part of the cooling circuit; the radiator, water pump, thermostat, hoses, cap, and coolant passages must also work correctly.

Expansion Tank vs. Coolant Reservoir Terminology

Catalogs may use coolant expansion tank, engine coolant reservoir tank, overflow tank, recovery tank, or surge tank for similar-looking parts. They are not always identical. A pressurized expansion or surge tank may use a pressure cap and connect directly to the circulating system, while an overflow bottle may receive coolant through a small hose from the radiator. Match the original configuration rather than relying on the name alone.

Signs of a Cracked or Leaking Tank

Inspect the coolant reservoir tank when you notice a low-coolant warning, a level that keeps dropping, overheating, or coolant odor under the hood. Possible evidence includes cracks, damp seams, staining or dried residue, damaged hose necks, loose connections, and leakage around the cap. These symptoms do not prove the tank itself has failed; radiator hoses, the water pump, thermostat housing, radiator, or other cooling-system components may also leak. Diagnose the source before replacing parts.

Cap, Sensor, Hose, and Fitment Checks

Start with the A-Premium vehicle selector and confirm the year, make, model, engine, trim, and any transmission notes in the listing. Compare the original tank's shape, mounting points, hose connections, fill markings, and OE or interchange numbers. Product configurations vary: some tanks include a cap, level sensor, hose, bracket, or mounting plate, while others require original components to be transferred or purchased separately. Read the Kit Parts Included field and product notes before checkout.

Safe Inspection and Replacement Considerations

Work only after the engine has cooled completely. Never remove an engine coolant reservoir cap while the engine is running or hot because the system may be pressurized. Follow vehicle-specific service information for draining, installation, refilling, and bleeding, and use the coolant specification in the owner's manual. After service, inspect the connections and monitor the cold level. If overheating continues, coolant drops again, or the repair exceeds your experience, stop driving and have the system professionally diagnosed.

FAQ

Do coolant expansion tanks include the cap and level sensor?

Not always. A-Premium listings show tanks with different combinations of caps, level sensors, hoses, brackets, and mounting plates. Check the title, product notes, and Kit Parts Included field for the exact item you are considering.

Are a coolant expansion tank and an overflow reservoir the same thing?

They may describe the same general category, but the actual system can be pressurized or non-pressurized and may route coolant differently. Match the original tank, connections, cap arrangement, and vehicle fitment instead of choosing by terminology alone.

What are common signs of a leaking coolant reservoir?

Cracks, wet seams, dried coolant residue, leaks near the cap or hose necks, repeated low-coolant warnings, and an unexplained falling level are common clues. Because other cooling parts can cause the same symptoms, confirm the leak source first.

Does falling coolant level always mean the expansion tank has failed?

No. The tank, cap, hoses, radiator, water pump, thermostat housing, heater circuit, and internal engine leaks can all contribute to coolant loss. Inspect and diagnose the entire system before replacing a part.

When can I safely open the cooling system?

Park on level ground, switch the engine off, and wait until it is completely cold. Never remove the coolant reservoir cap while the engine is running or hot. Follow the vehicle's specified checking procedure.