The pink rv stuff typically doesn't have a cold rating low enough to make me comfortable using it in the engine.
Automotive anti freeze is not legal to discharge into the water as it is toxic. There is no way to flush the heat exchanger and cooling system without discharging some of the antifreeze
They make a biodegradable type with colder temp protection than the plumbing system stuff. That's what I use in the engine.
^^ Absolutely true.We've used the rv stuff for years and the worse ever seen is the stuff turning to something like a slushy at -40.
And the C and F scales converge at -40.
Thank yew kind sir. :neutral:^^ Absolutely true.
Don, there is a lot of water in the engine heat exchanger, water lift and exhaust line. Do yourself a favor and test the antifreeze you'll see coming out of the exhaust when you run it through. Chances are it'll show up at somewhere around - 10 (C), which is clearly not enough in your neck of the woods (or mine LOL). Just run some more through until what you get test at what you want. Because I winter in Florida I do not go to my boat from late October to mid-April. Safety of the mind makes me run antifreeze through until it reads -40 at the exhaust. Then I know the engine is thoroughly protected. BTW I use the green stuff (ethylene glycol) in the engine and the pink stuff in the boat fresh water system. The hot water tank gets drained and is by-passed as I do not want the pink stuff in there. Less than a month to go here before haul-out. Good sailing left yet !Just to be sure of which side of the cooling system is being discussed here. On the fresh water side ( the side that comes from the lake) I use RV anti-freeze for the winter. After I pull for the year I change the oil and filter then start it and run RV though until I see pink.
On the engine side (the side that remains in the engine) I use regular anti-freeze pre-mix that's good for -40.
Your not understanding.The cost benefit suggests something like 36 years. It's never killed the grass at the acreage, unlike what happened to the lawn one time when a jug of Prestone fell over.
Like Stu says, your boat, your choice.
^^ Very true. In fact, the industry-standard way to test burst point is to fill a glass vial completely full (no air), invert, and place in a freezer. The glass will not burst until the last bit freezes. So long as it is a slushy, the water contracts while the ice expands.The other key thing to remember that the real risk to a winterized engine is not the liquid in the cooling system becoming solid, but it EXPANDING.
Water (H20) is very unique in that it expands when changing from its liquid to solid state. Nothing else does that. That's why it cracks pipes when it freezes.
Like most substances, propylene glycol contracts when it freezes, and a 50:50 PG/water mix stays so close to the same volume after it freezes or turns to slush that is is unlikely to damage parts unless the motor is started when it is frozen.