I am getting a slow coolant drip from my inverter . The very slow leak appears on the left side of inverter when facing the front of car with hood open . The connection point alum tube to coolant resevoir black rubber tube. The inverter coolant connection reservoir tube side is damp to the touch and has visible red goop buildup.......
Like the connection points in the bottom of this torn down inverter? http://techno-fandom.org/~hobbit/cars/ginv/618channels.jpg If it is the tube going into the inverter, on the left, then I can't see what to do about it. But this stuff can flow and slime around. Maybe clean thoroughly and see where the source is more closely.
The most likely cause of your leak is a cracked inverter coolant reservoir. This is semi-common and more so on an older car. To verify this, unbolt the two front bolts on the inverter and pivot it toward the drivers side fender (lift slightly up and to the right). This will give you a better view. I'd be willing to bet the plastic on the reservoir is cracked (hairline crack) at the point where it enters the inverter. The reservoir can be replaced w/out completely removing the inverter but, its a pain in the butt.
I plan on images just need some time.......the drip/small leak is on the inverter connection side and not reservoir from my vantage perspective....I am consider another rebuilt inverter with the mileage at 105,000 plus,, If my orientation is correct on this image would be far left tube/connection
Hi- If you replace the Inverter could you do me a big favor and take the bottom part off the leaking one to expose the coolant channels. I want to see how corroded it gets in there please. Pics of the coolant channels. Thank you.
oh do you a flavor.......just kiddin.........from what I know the coolant gels up and blocks the small channels
Well, from the way you describe it, its on the same side as the reservoir. If that's the case, The most likely cause of the leak is a crack in the reservoir (especially since yours is a salvage vehicle). The coolant is probably running allong the hose and other hardware to a point where it can drip. This will make it appear to be leaking somewhere else. I'd hate to see you change out the entire inverter only to find out the plastic reservoir was leaking. But, it is a free country.