So the sears I work at is closing, and things are on clearance prices.
There's marine/rv antifreeze on sale at 50% off.
I looked on the bottle: it's propylene glycol. iirc that's the same as gm's dex-cool, right? ...as opposed to traditional antifreeze, which is ethylene. something like that.
I've been looking this up. Seems that propylene glycol doesn't go down *quite* as low in temperature, but low enough for my purposes, and might be slower to break down (longer lifespan).
Can I put this coolant in my car? It says "not for cars," but that might be a qualified "no."
Will it form an emulsion with any polyethylene glycol left in the system?
how are those "mixes with either one" coolants formulated anyway?
And will it damage my rubber hoses, if there was any different chemistry there for a dexcool/propylene car vs an ethylene car.
basically, can I use it (and should I buy some at 1/2 off), and what are some of the differences I should be aware of?
There's marine/rv antifreeze on sale at 50% off.
I looked on the bottle: it's propylene glycol. iirc that's the same as gm's dex-cool, right? ...as opposed to traditional antifreeze, which is ethylene. something like that.
I've been looking this up. Seems that propylene glycol doesn't go down *quite* as low in temperature, but low enough for my purposes, and might be slower to break down (longer lifespan).
Can I put this coolant in my car? It says "not for cars," but that might be a qualified "no."
Will it form an emulsion with any polyethylene glycol left in the system?
how are those "mixes with either one" coolants formulated anyway?
And will it damage my rubber hoses, if there was any different chemistry there for a dexcool/propylene car vs an ethylene car.
basically, can I use it (and should I buy some at 1/2 off), and what are some of the differences I should be aware of?
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