Coolant flush

Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by heavyhaulerss, Jan 21, 2015.

  1. heavyhaulerss

    heavyhaulerss Road Train Member

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    I just thought of something. when doing a coolant flush, which I have never done, could I just do the same as I would with my car? I have the prestone flush kit, could I just cut into 1 of the heater hoses, put in the tee, connect garden hose & flush away with truck running? I am looking into flushing the entire cooling sys, first emptying all coolant, fill with water & cleaner, let run a while, then flush. then fill with antifreeze & distilled water since it's been in the 60's already a few times, I thought I might do this in a couple weeks or later.


    comments ?
     
    clausland Thanks this.
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  3. beemergary

    beemergary Light Load Member

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    Could never figure why they would make people think anti freeze is a coolant. Water has a higher cooling factor. You do need the rust and lubrication additives.
     
  4. clausland

    clausland Road Train Member

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    Never thought about using distilled water, but that makes sense....The water here is awful hard and the mineral content is likely not a good addition to the cooling system.....I've got a '96 Ford F-250 with a 351 that developed a coolant leak.....Took the darn thing apart and found that pinholes had developed in the head, from the inside out, next to the number 2 cylinder...Never saw that before and wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it.. Also, holes developed in the core plug in the rear of the same head...
     
  5. JohnP3

    JohnP3 Road Train Member

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    Antifreeze lowers the boiling point of the coolant, 55% antifreeze and a 15 lb cap gives you a boiling point of 243 degrees. Water even under pressure will boil at the valve area, and will pit the hell out of the liners, from Cavitation.
    Doing a flush of the cooling system is always a great idea, you want to remove the lower block plugs to get the scale out. I use a pail of warm water with Arm and Hammer washing soda, mixed, with a paint mixer,or bent welding rod, as strong as possible, pore into another pail and add some dishwasher soap, fill the unit with every drop you can, that way it cleans the inside of the recovery/surge tank. doing it this way will even remove the scale.
    When you flush it out do the heater backwards to clean it as much as possible.
     
    heavyhaulerss and crzyjarmans Thank this.
  6. heavyhaulerss

    heavyhaulerss Road Train Member

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    I read where tap water can cause this & to use distilled water.
     
  7. heavyhaulerss

    heavyhaulerss Road Train Member

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    what is lower block plugs? where are lower block plugs on a 95/ det. do the heater backwards? explain please. is my way described o.k. as like per instructions on prestone flush kit instructions? sorry for the ignorance. :biggrin_25514:
     
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