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- #81
when i said swap out, i meant to change from using a quality dex cool. 5 years or 150k miles is gms reccomendation for change intervals.I thought the coolant should be changed at 6 years or 150,000 miles?
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when i said swap out, i meant to change from using a quality dex cool. 5 years or 150k miles is gms reccomendation for change intervals.I thought the coolant should be changed at 6 years or 150,000 miles?
Is dexcool better, or this new stuff. Would I do any harm if I drained and switched, as I am due for a fluid change.
What about the water pump lubricant that the green stuff supposedly has that apparently needs refreshed/replaced periodically? How does the Evans approach this situation?
The filters are not filtering anything. All the are is nitrate tablets like the tablet floater in your swimming pool. The nitrate is consumed because of electrolysis on the "wet sleeved" engines creating so much static electricity leading to pitting. You cant get a good enough ground to those sleeves like a regular block. Then the industry learned people will spend the money thinking its worth it for all engines, most have too high nitrate and actually plug radiators from it. A little knowledge being more dangerous thing. Like AK Driver said, use the test strips. That will let you know when to spend the money.
As far as needing a lubricant for the water pump, i dont think so. Water keeps the seal wet and cool- no worries. Ive ran cars years on just water since there is no freeze concearn here, common in Vegas. No problems. Also consider industrial plants that run only water, no lubricant is used and millions of gallons that pump all the time. Maybe a longer life from additives, but idk
As EVANS does they claim their product does not allow electrolysis to take hold . . .
I suspect, any flow of electricity within/through the radiator could corrode everything from within, the simple test is a multimeter one probe in the coolant the other on a battery terminal.Begs the question of whether it is conductive.
This the best way to go.The moving water creates enough to do damage. Yes if you can read an electrical difference, add a ground wire to it.
Marketing ploy to demonize competitor IMO. I've measured each cylinder temp and there was never any wild crazy temp spread and the Burb ran slightly warmer with coolant temps not rising to temp's it did w/EGW mix.http://www.norosion.com/evanstest.htm
I Still have the Evans running, but I was surfing for any competitor that would be cheaper to work with and found this. Not very encouraging but they use pressurized systems. I $tay with Evans for now. The Burb just takes so darn much coolant though.