Long story short, the previous owners of my 1990 Grand Marquis left it neglected for long periods of time with water in the cooling system...
The first sign of the problem was when my heat stopped working (filthy coolant should have been the first sign, but what can I say, I was ignorant). I took it to my regular mechanic and he flushed the heater core and sent me on my way. By the time I got home the heat was barely working anymore. I took it back to my mechanic and he proceeded to flush the cooling system back and forth with a conventional garden hose, let it sit with cleaning solution, and more flushing, but every time he fills it up with coolant and lets the car run for a 20-30 minutes the heater core gets clogged up again with chunks of crap. He told me that he did all he could with the equipment he has but hasn't made any progress, because of this he didn't charge me. He made some suggestions and I did some research. To the best of my limited knowledge there are two ways of dealing with this (not including replacing EVERYTHING)
1) A machine that flushes the cooling system continually while filtering it
2) A pulsating power flush tool that uses compressed air and water, like this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6TVKwiINQ4
So I called around until I came across a shop called First Choice Auto Clinic that had one of the machines that runs it through a filter and they did a lot of work on classic cars... for reasons I won't mention here they will definitely NOT be my "first choice".
They pointed out that my coolant pump needed replaced (which was true) and thermostat (which I'm assuming was true) but they wanted to charge me $500 to put all new radiator and heater hoses. I knew that radiator hoses weren't rocket science and figured I could have someone else do the heater hoses if I can't so I decided to take that off the bill. So after flushing it with a regular hose and replacing the parts they hooked it up to the their machine. I made sure that they filled it back up with coolant and let it run for a while to insure that it didn't just clog back up. Heat worked great, there were no leaks, everything was fine... for about a day and a half.
They informed me prior to the work (and I already knew) that with a system this fucked it was going to take multiple flushes to get out all the crud that sunk to the bottom of the engine block and hoses, but I thought that it would have at least lasted through the weekend. The thing that really confuses me is that if the coolant is so fucked that it's clogging the heater core then wouldn't it be clogging my radiator too? Yet I have no problems with overheating. I don't appear to be loosing or leaking coolant either. I... don't know.
So here's my plan of action, unless I can gather any new information to apply to this conundrum, I'm ordering radiator hoses from rock auto right now that I will attempt to replace at my friends house (I live in an apt, no garden hose, and technically I'm not allowed to work on my car there) and I'm in the process of learning more about the heater hoses so I can replace as many of those as I can(however many there are) and have my mechanic replace the ones I can't (hopefully I can replace them all). THEN, after all the hoses are replaced I'm going to call some more places and try to find a shop that has a Gates PowerClean fush tool. THEN, I don't know, maybe get a new heater core... THEN...
If anyone has any suggestions that might help me, things to check or consider, or if you can link me to other threads with similar issues of either a neglected cooling system or hose replacements then I would be very very very grateful. Thank you!

The first sign of the problem was when my heat stopped working (filthy coolant should have been the first sign, but what can I say, I was ignorant). I took it to my regular mechanic and he flushed the heater core and sent me on my way. By the time I got home the heat was barely working anymore. I took it back to my mechanic and he proceeded to flush the cooling system back and forth with a conventional garden hose, let it sit with cleaning solution, and more flushing, but every time he fills it up with coolant and lets the car run for a 20-30 minutes the heater core gets clogged up again with chunks of crap. He told me that he did all he could with the equipment he has but hasn't made any progress, because of this he didn't charge me. He made some suggestions and I did some research. To the best of my limited knowledge there are two ways of dealing with this (not including replacing EVERYTHING)
1) A machine that flushes the cooling system continually while filtering it
2) A pulsating power flush tool that uses compressed air and water, like this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6TVKwiINQ4
So I called around until I came across a shop called First Choice Auto Clinic that had one of the machines that runs it through a filter and they did a lot of work on classic cars... for reasons I won't mention here they will definitely NOT be my "first choice".
They pointed out that my coolant pump needed replaced (which was true) and thermostat (which I'm assuming was true) but they wanted to charge me $500 to put all new radiator and heater hoses. I knew that radiator hoses weren't rocket science and figured I could have someone else do the heater hoses if I can't so I decided to take that off the bill. So after flushing it with a regular hose and replacing the parts they hooked it up to the their machine. I made sure that they filled it back up with coolant and let it run for a while to insure that it didn't just clog back up. Heat worked great, there were no leaks, everything was fine... for about a day and a half.
They informed me prior to the work (and I already knew) that with a system this fucked it was going to take multiple flushes to get out all the crud that sunk to the bottom of the engine block and hoses, but I thought that it would have at least lasted through the weekend. The thing that really confuses me is that if the coolant is so fucked that it's clogging the heater core then wouldn't it be clogging my radiator too? Yet I have no problems with overheating. I don't appear to be loosing or leaking coolant either. I... don't know.
So here's my plan of action, unless I can gather any new information to apply to this conundrum, I'm ordering radiator hoses from rock auto right now that I will attempt to replace at my friends house (I live in an apt, no garden hose, and technically I'm not allowed to work on my car there) and I'm in the process of learning more about the heater hoses so I can replace as many of those as I can(however many there are) and have my mechanic replace the ones I can't (hopefully I can replace them all). THEN, after all the hoses are replaced I'm going to call some more places and try to find a shop that has a Gates PowerClean fush tool. THEN, I don't know, maybe get a new heater core... THEN...

If anyone has any suggestions that might help me, things to check or consider, or if you can link me to other threads with similar issues of either a neglected cooling system or hose replacements then I would be very very very grateful. Thank you!
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