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Thread: Radiator Flush Technique Question

  1. #51
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    Don’t forget Colour isn’t an indicator of coolant type. Except by brand.

    You need to know the brand Radiator Flush Technique Question

  2. #52
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    Fair call DJ. It is interesting that penrite specs first red then blue coolant. Other comments noted too. Don't know if I'm hurting my water pump or not.

  3. #53
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eric SDV6SE View Post
    Fair call DJ. It is interesting that penrite specs first red then blue coolant. Other comments noted too. Don't know if I'm hurting my water pump or not.
    When you say first Red, then Blue where are you looking?

    The Pro and Enthusiast apps both say ONLY blue 8yr OEM

  4. #54
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tombie View Post
    When you say first Red, then Blue where are you looking?

    The Pro and Enthusiast apps both say ONLY blue 8yr OEM
    I don’t trust anything they say when they have up to date contradictory material published.
    2010 TDV6 3.0L Discovery 4 HSE
    2007 Audi RS4 (B7)

  5. #55
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    Penrite site now says blue 8yr coolant: Find the right oil for your vehicle | Penrite Product Selector | Penrite Oil

    In Nov 2018, the same site / product selector specced the red 8yr 500,000km concentrate...

  6. #56
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eric SDV6SE View Post
    Penrite site now says blue 8yr coolant: Find the right oil for your vehicle | Penrite Product Selector | Penrite Oil

    In Nov 2018, the same site / product selector specced the red 8yr 500,000km concentrate...
    And their static documentation says both products meet the applicable Ford spec hence the last thousand posts.
    2010 TDV6 3.0L Discovery 4 HSE
    2007 Audi RS4 (B7)

  7. #57
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    Interestingly Nulon ranks 3 choices.

    One Coolant
    Heavy Diesel
    Red Long Life


    Red long life is silicate free (documented) the others don’t state.

    One Coolant and Red Long Life both have the Ford Spec...
    The Nulon coolant brochure states Blue LL has no Silicates.

    I don’t know if they even know what’s what!

  8. #58
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tombie View Post
    Interestingly Nulon ranks 3 choices.

    One Coolant
    Heavy Diesel
    Red Long Life


    Red long life is silicate free (documented) the others don’t state.

    One Coolant and Red Long Life both have the Ford Spec...
    The Nulon coolant brochure states Blue LL has no Silicates.

    I don’t know if they even know what’s what!
    I am not trying to be difficult, honestly. I try and make decisions empirically, and so far I just don’t have detailed factual data to say what’s what. Having the actual spec would finalise this debate. I’m so tempted to pay for it!!!’
    2010 TDV6 3.0L Discovery 4 HSE
    2007 Audi RS4 (B7)

  9. #59
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    Radiator Flush Technique Question

    Never saw your enquiries as difficult.
    Just went and compared another brand to see what they recommended.



    So after a heap of reading on a few sites (not coolant makers but cooling system engineers) - here’s the skinny on what is what:

    ***Hybrid SiOATs***

    In Europe, problems with hard water minerals forced coolant technologies to be phosphate-free. Calcium and magnesium, minerals found in hard water, react with phosphate inhibitors to form calcium or magnesium phosphate, which typically leads to scale formation on hot engine surfaces. This could lead to loss of heat transfer or corrosion under the scale.

    To replace phosphates, conventional European coolants contain a mix of inorganic oxides like silicates and inhibitors called carboxylates. Carboxylates provide corrosion protection by chemically interacting at the metallic corrosion sites, rather than by forming a layer of inhibitors that cover the total surface.

    The mix of carboxylates and silicates is also called a hybrid technology because it is a mix of conventional inorganic technology and fully carboxylate or organic technology. European engine coolants exist in various colors; typically each manufacturer requires a different color.

    ***And then there’s OATs with no Silicates.***

    In Asia, problems with water pump seals and poor heat transfer have led to the ban of coolants containing silicate. To provide protection, most coolants contain a mix of carboxylates and inorganic inhibitors like phosphates.

    These coolants are hybrids. They are distinct from the European hybrids due to the lack of silicates. Coolants from Asian OEMs can be a variety of colors including red, orange and green.

    Extended-life carboxylate-based coolants were developed to be globally acceptable and provide superior performance over existing technologies. This technology is also known as organic additive technology (OATs). Because full carboxylate coolants have no silicates, they meet the stringent requirements of the Asian specifications.

    They also meet the European antifreeze requirements because they have no phosphates. These engine coolants have developed international popularity due to having an unsurpassed corrosion protection for extended time intervals.


    Essentially no Silicates helps cooling by better contact between coolant and metal surfaces.

  10. #60
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    Quote Originally Posted by BradC View Post
    I dunno about yours, but on mine the fuel cooler hose to hard plastic line is plug-in. Just push the release buttons to un-plug it and drop it into a bucket.
    It's on the drivers side right above the plastic cover at the front just outside the chassis rail. Don't even need to take the belly pan off.
    Ok this is going to be my drain strategy.

    I will do a demin rinse stage after dropping the old coolant with the flush product added.

    In the rinse stage is a solid drive good enough vs the manuals rev to 3000 for 1 minute then idle for 5 minutes and repeat instruction?

    Just a quick question for anyone out there on temps.

    How long do you need to let the engine cool down for draining and then do you need to wait further until real cool before filling again with the cold water or new coolant?

    Thanks

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