Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2004 21:40:30 -0400
Reply-To: "Daniel L. Katz" <katzd54@YAHOO.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: "Daniel L. Katz" <katzd54@YAHOO.COM>
Subject: Re: coolant system trivia
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
gary:
also, and i hope this does start a huge thread, i would not use orange
stuff. orange stuff can turn coolant into jell in a dirty, corroded, well
worn system. if previous coolant was vw blue, i would definitely stick
with that; if it was green, i would stick with nominal green chemistry,
and use a good quality meat and potatoes green anti-freeze, such as sold
by napa. at this point, i recommend circulating lots and lots of pure,
clean water through that system and then adding blue or green stuff as
needed.
dan
On Mon, 26 Apr 2004 09:11:59 -0700, gary hradek <hradek@YAHOO.COM> wrote:
>I have been dealing with a conditon that I believe to
>be a plugged radiator. I have ruled out most other
>cheaper fixes. Over the past week I have isolated
>the radiator at the point of the rear most end of the
>big pipes and plugged them with corks and soaked the
>isolated system with 0.2M citric acid for a week.
>Flushing the system with hot water under house
>pressure gave a flow rate about 6 gallons per second.
>The first flush was very black and showed evidence of
>bits of aluminum from what I am hoping to be some
>after market sealer rather than the radiator itself.
>After flushing the system I filled with the orange
>stuff. What I find intersting about the vanagon
>coolant system is that the flow rate for water alone
>is much faster than with antifreeze added. This is
>reflected well by the (temperature at idle as seen by
>the gauge) TAI.
>The TAI with water alone is much lower and at position
>determined by the thermostat. The low speed fan has
>no problem keeping the engine temperature on the red
>light dot even on a very hot day. Once you add
>antifreeze the TAI goes up above the light unless you
>increase the rpm. The TIA on a hot day(about 95)
>will respond more slowly to the cooling affect of the
>low speed fan.
> My question is would I be better off adding less
>antifreeze and more water and perhaps adding some
>after market corrosion inhibitor and water pump
>lubricant? thanks gary
>
>
>
>
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