Quote:
ddgonzal wrote:
5. Make sure you mix the water & antifireeze coolant in the ratio recommended on the coolant container. Ignore wind-chill; mix for the "real" temperature. This will prevent the radiator from freezing over even if there is no flow.
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ddgonzal
As usual, you are right on the money, but i have a diferent slant on this one [above]
The correct antifreeze will prevent the coolant from freezing "inside" the radiator, but it has no effect in ice forming outside of it.
One of my fleet vehicles set off one bitterly cold day from a snowfield region.
They drove at modest speed & low throttle setting through a heavy mist, or fog. The wind chill factor built up a great deal of "RIME ICE" [ask a pilot what that is] This ice formed a sheet across the front of the radiator, & elsewhere. When the air stopped flowing, the whole radiator got hot, melting the ice that was touching it & out to a short distance. By this time the ice sheet was thick enough to remain intact, despite the radiator's heat.
The car started to perform badly [surprise surprise] so they stoped at a service station [Williamsdale for our ACT members] This is the only place for miles, so they got a pie & took a twinkle. When they went to start it again, it spun over as if there were no plugs in it.
When we pulled it down, the block was bent about 5 thou. This was measured at the deck, the pan rail, & the main tunnel. It had about 6,000k on it.
The driver & passengers declared it was the thickest mist that they had seen at this time of year & that the Rime ice on the aerial was about 2" thick. I got to it after the ice melted.
No amount of antifreeze would have prevented this, but blocking half of the radiator, & warming the engine [& radiator] BEFORE setting off may well have saved the day. This took place in about '84 or '85.
What a godsend those heated air type aircleaners are. Cold air is good for racing, but it's a bloody pain if you are driving at low speed in a very cold area. Nothing like fuel condensing on manifold walls & ice forming in carb internal passages to spoil driveability in traffic.