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On Tue, 19 May 2009 20:05:29 +0200, "Edgar"
wrote: Even without leakage if you drain and refill every winter the build-up will continue until it poses a problem, so it is better to winterise with antifreeze rather than draining every year A long time ago cheap antifreeze was methanol, and you put it in in the fall and drained it and replaced it with water in the spring. You had a 140 degree thermostat for winter and a 180 degree one for summer. That went out more than fifty years ago. Now you use a glycol blend and replace it every two years. 220 degree thermostats are common. The system is under pressure, which raises the boiling point. You are in deep ship warpage wise if you get a modern engine hot enough to boil the coolant. The boiling begins in the cylinder head. When it warps you blow the head gasket. If it warp is permanent, you have to remachine it flat, or a new gasket will not last. Cadillac built an engine that would run, at drastically reduced power, without coolant. The cylinders fired half the time, the other half air cooling. Gets you out of the desert even if you blow a hose. Everyone else replaces dubious hoses before they head for Vegas. Cadillac had trouble with boiling brake fluid. When they discovered it was driving around with a foot on the brake pedal that caused the problem, they specified a higher boiling point fluid. They knew you couldn't educate the geezers. Casady |
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