That can happen also. It just depends on the exact failure.
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Exactly. For the long division version...
They can, but dont usually progress to that point.
Usually compression will push the gases through the coolant system on a small crack area. The hot gases superheat the coolant not allowing the coolant to remove heat from the block and heads. Then the engine overheats.
During diagnostics the failure is easier to detect in a gasoline engine than diesel by the chemical test kit because the gasoline has a much quicker reaction with the test chemical along with the btu of gas vs diesel carried to the coolant through the gasses.
Also, most gas engines are less than 170 psi, while the 6.5 should be 380-400 psi. So remember that massive increase in pressure difference when trying to force gasses through the same size crack in comparison. A failure half the size in a diesel will transfer more than twice the heat to the coolant through the failure point.
When you get a larger crack or opening in the failure location the volume of coolant can be enough that during the 3 non compression strokes of the piston that there is a bit of coolant in the chamber that makes it's way out the exhaust.- so you need a "worse failure" to get steam out the exhaust than you do to push gases into the coolant. Also the intake stroke of a gas engine produces vacuum to assist sucking in the coolant during that stroke. Under turbo boost your 6.5 does not, there is always pressure in your system, not vacuum. The n/a 6.2 & 6.5 engines are more likely to steam when they have blown headgaskets.
Becasue of this the gas engine is more likely to have coolant make it way through a larger opening, fighting less cylinder pressure, to be turned into steam in the exhaust.
By the time you have enough coolant making its way into the exhaust system to be turned into steam, you dont have an engine that gets hot and overheats on its way to Grandmas house. It is overheated and puking coolant before you get to the freeway.
So it isn't that your mechanic is wrong in looking for other failure points first, he just hasn't seen it.