Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
There are two materials used for anti-freeze these days, ethylene
glycol, which is widely used in automotive applications, and propylene glycol, which is sold for many marine applications. Ethylene glycol is a little cheaper and more widely available. It is poisonous to humans in large doses and to some animals in small doses. On the other hand, propylene glycol is approved by the FDA as a food additive and should be your choice for this use. Either can be used as an antifreeze and coolant in engines, so occasional heating in a hot water heater would be no problem at all. Be careful to get the water heater actually filled with a mixture that will freeze below -10F (for Boston) -- simply putting the freshwater pump intake into a bucket filled with a -10F mixture and opening the faucets one at a time might leave the water heater with mostly water inside. Better to drain everything and then fill with -50F mixture. This will cost a couple of bucks more, but what's a new water heater worth? Jim Woodward www.mvFintry.com (Richard Malcolm) wrote in message om... I was planning to keep the boat in the water for a while up here in Boston. I was thinking about draining all the fresh water out and replacing it with anti freeze. either I am either too lazy or worried that if I disconnect and bypass the hot water heater I will mees it up. I am wondering if anything will happen to the antifreeze in the next month or 2 if it gets heated by in the water heater. I am planning not to do much at this time to the waste water sytem as I like having some conforts. What do you think? can I just put antifreeze in the fresh water sytem or do I really need to disconnect the water heater from the loop? thanks |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Diluting RV Antifreeze | General | |||
Winterize - Antifreeze | General |