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I don't know how color relates to chemicals - but a friend recently
bought a sailboat - turned out it had cooling problems that the test runs didn't point out. It had green antifreeze in it. A lady capt down the dock said you should only put orange antifreeze in marine diesels otherwise they develop cooling problems from some silicate ? pebbles/granules that develop in the coolant - so he drained it and flushed it and sure enough there were handfuls of sand-pebbles clogging it up. So I learned to use orange antifreeze - what do the colors mean?? On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 20:11:48 -0400, "Jeff Morris" wrote: I'm in the middle of changing the antifreeze in my Yanmar 2GM20FC engines and am curious if I should change type. I've been using Ethylene Glycol, following the advice of a Yanmar mechanic who said using Propylene Glycol would void my warranty. I've never been able to verify that, and I'm now long out of warranty so I'm wondering if its time to switch to the more environmentally friendly Propylene. I also think that using the easy to dispose propylene would encourage me to change more frequently. Secondly, if I do change, do I have to flush out all of the old, or is it sufficient to just drain it? TIA, Jeff |
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