Today I checked my Lizzy as preparation for my tomorrow trip. I was wondering that a lot of water was missing. I filled it up and then I got the idea to have a look on the back side of the radiator... and I saw one pipe appearing wet.

It is a radiator of a Touring 1915, brass.
The marked pipe is definitely not dry. I touched it with a piece of toilet paper and it soaked up a little bit of water.
Luckily this is the back-most pipe, and I can only hope that the water is not coming from an inner pipe. At least, the front of the radiator is dry.
This radiator is one with round pipes and chances are good that it is an original one. It has a brass plate soldered on right side of upper chamber, showing this:
My questions:
At the moment coolant loss is not so dramatic, so I will be able to drive it tomorrow and next time, but this needs to be repaired. Sadly I have no experience in that, so I better ask first before doing something stupid.
Leakage must me very minimal, water does not drop on my garage floor. I watched the radiator after filling it above the perforated metal sheet in its upper chamber, so there is everything filled up. The marked rib (where the joint is brown) is the last wet one, all ribs below are dry since more than one hour.
- To find the exact point of leakage, I will have to submerge the entire radiator in water and set it under slight pressure. This is a job for winter time, I don't think that the leakage will get worse so quickly.
- What are well working methods for sealing? As this appears to be the back most pipe, access should be good. The leakage can be between upper chamber and pipe, or somewhere along the pipe then. Is soldering the only way (this will require a specialist and perhaps partially removing a rib), or are there also other options, i.e. applying some special sealant/glue from outside? My concern is the relatively high temperature, but it is helpful that the cooling system has no pressure. If it wouldn't be so hot, I would think about using some drops of Epoxy, but at almost 100°C I am not so sure any more.
- Having a look on the shape of upper radiator ribs, it seems there was some repair in the past, otherwise they would be straight.
Rainer