The engine will leak out coolant/antifreeze from the freeze plug area. Freeze plugs can be replaced, it may take a lot of work to replace one but they are made to be replaceable. It is not advisable to drive any vehicle with a blown freeze plug.
Pull the old freeze plug, clean up the hole, press in a replacment. Unfortunately you may need to remove a lot of peripheral stuff to get to the freeze plug.
you should take it to a repair shop to work on it.
I had one of these when I lived in Wyoming. A freeze plug in your engine block is replaced with a heater plug that keeps the block warm so your fluids don't freeze. There is what looks like an extension cord you use to plug the block heater into an outlet. I had a 25 foot cord I ran from my bedroom window to the plug hanging under my truck parked outside my apartment.
I bought a 1993 Grand Am back in March and didn't get to drive it long at all. I had close to $1000 put in it. The guy I got it from said the only thing I needed was a motor for the drivers side and it would work. It still don't work. I need to find out how hard it is to change a freeze plug
If you are referring to plugs in the engine block, sometimes called freeze plugs, they are used to remove sand from the casting when the engine block is cast. They are not freeze plugs and serve no purpose after manufacture.
check out the spark plug
how does seniorty work when they have been a freeze on hiring.
Perhaps your render distance is incorrect. If it's on 'Far', try changing it to 'Normal'. If you are using mods, they may not work with Windows 7.
Yes, but doubling the voltage on any piece of equipment is a sure way of destroying that equipment.
Try removing the batteries, if that doesn't work did the calculator come with a cable connecting it to the computer? (If it does plug this into the computer and it should hopefully un-freeze)
get a technician!! lyk3 duuuuuuhh??? You need a slide dent puller type hammer with an L fitting and you drill a hole in the center of the leaking plug then work the L fitting into the hole and hammer (pull) it out. Put a little Permatex on the new freeze plug and with a wooden block, tap it in firmly. (of course you must have already acquired the correct size plug from your dealer). But---there are chemicals that may seal the plug and save a great deal of work as most plugs are hard to access. In the old days, one dumped 3 egg whites in the radiator and wallah. it sealed. Of course you can also plug up your heater etc with this method. The new chemicals are much better, check K-mart, Wal Mart or Auto Zone. If your freeze plug is leaking you may not have strong enough antifreeze? Get that checked and corrected also before the stop-leak. Good luck. :>} Fullait