CADPoint
Well-known member
I never even knew it was available...

Not that simple. I topped of the recovery tank in the old Ram. Premix was $8.** at Walmart. Full strength was, I think, ~$10.** or $12xx / gallon, plus distilled water was about $1.25.Like the lottery, pre-mix is a tax on people who are bad at math. And FYI, it's not a "$3.00" savings. One gallon of concentrate ($12 at WallyMart) and one gallon of distilled water (about $1) is $13 vs $21 for two gallons of the pre-mix. Since I have to pour both into the radiator when I service the car, there's no additional labor for "mixing". Your money, your call.
Lots of work to save $3.00 on a jug of antifreeze, though.Sorry for people with bad water. No problems this location. Two sources for well water. One, dig well enough to get so called surface water which is water in dirt down to rock layer. No problems for me, family's old rock lined well had the best tasting water ever. Unfortunately, rock lining was dislarged and new well had to be dug, which tasted ok after the concrete taste from the pipe lining went away. Other source of well water is to drill to the rock level, seal the well with steel pipe, then continue drilling. Usually cracks in rock layer are found with water in them. If lucky the drill goes into a large cavity with lots of water. However, my nearby neighbor had a well drilled and it was drilled to 1000 feet and it came up dry. In the past some municipalities drilled several wells around the town and piped the water to tall tanks to provide water pressure. Now the area has water systems that get water from rivers, using water treatment plants. This is western SC.
KEH
Nope. Municipal waterTrue, there are some that are pretty bad, but for over 30 years I haven't had any issues.
Sounds like she had well water. It is very eggy in some areas.
I've seen develpoments that have their own wells and their own water treatment systems. Most aren't anything more than a large water softener.
That's strange to get the sulphur smell from city water.Nope. Municipal water
Not that simple. I topped of the recovery tank in the old Ram. Premix was $8.** at Walmart. Full strength was, I think, ~$10.** or $12xx / gallon, plus distilled water was about $1.25.
The truck needed about 3/4 of a gallon. The math says it cost ~\$8.00 to top off the reservoir with premix, but would have cost something like $11.xxor $13.** to use concentrate, plus find another clean container to do the mixing.
Plus, the distilled water is at the other end of the store, and they’re usually out of stock.
Am I the only one who wonders about the quality of the water in the pre-mixed coolants?I never bought pre-mix until I lived where there is hard water.
Now I will buy it if distilled water isn't handy, but I keep a couple gallons of distilled on hand just in case.
It sometimes gets used for batteries or other stuff anyways.
Probably tap water.Am I the only one who wonders about the quality of the water in the pre-mixed coolants?
Steve
Google says it can be from decay, bacteria, and even a chemical reaction inside the water heater. I guess alll of these can produce hydrogen sulfide gas. Who knew?I have in years past smelled the sulphur in water in the low country near Charleston, SC. I was told that the smell came from decaying vegetation in the swamps getting it the water, but I don't know and I don't know about the source of the smell in other areas.
KEH
Half left in a garage that I’m 2100 miles away from where I live for half the year.Except you'd still have half left if you mixed it yourself so it would have been more like $7 for that top up and next time you don't need to buy any so you're ahead of the game.
That's some old antifreeze, I would recommend a drain and change.Half left in a garage that I’m 2100 miles away from where I live for half the year.
And antifreeze that’s only good for the seventeen year old truck that I keep there. I don’t recall the last time, if ever, I topped it off since changing it. Probably been seven to ten years.
Exactly the situation that the poster above this one is in.
That's a good point. Seems the problems I read about are about mixing different types. Still have to keep some of the correct type on hand though initially.And to be honest, if you flush a system, you can use any modern antifreeze, especially if you change it regularly[3 years usually]. Most of the issues come from mixing different types of antifreeze. Yes even in a BMW.
I'm with you. A couple bucks to avoid buying extra or walking unnecessarily? I'm on boardPlus, the distilled water is at the other end of the store, and they’re usually out of stock.
Deionized / distilled water. Those plants have massive water treatment capabilities.Am I the only one who wonders about the quality of the water in the pre-mixed coolants?
Steve
No argument on the effectiveness of an engineered control like that, but I bet there was some bitching about the cost.Deionized / distilled water. Those plants have massive water treatment capabilities.
Interestind (maybe) anecdote. Ignore if it bores you.
Back in the early 90s we were supplying Diesel engines to an automotive assembly plant that made both passenger cars and vans. The production factory fill antifreeze was delivered as concentrate, in bulk, and was diluted to 50/50 at the plant prior to end of line vehicle cooling system fill. The antifreeze specified was a high quality product that met both the gasoline passenger car and HD Diesel spec.
We ran into a rash of low mileage cylinder head cracks in the monthly warranty review.
Ends up that the cooling cross drills in the valve bridge were all plugged with silicate dropout from the antifreeze. The quality control in the plant somehow failed and they weren’t adding water to dilute the full strength ethyl glycol to the required 50/50 mix, With full strength antifreeze in the system, silicates would drop out of solution in the hottest part of the cooling system, the valve bridge cross drill.
That led to metal temperatures exceeding the thermal limit of the cast iron, and subsequent cracking in relatively low hours.
It was an easy find, and lead to an almost immediate process change at the plant to only allow 50/50 diluted antifreeze on the premises.
I doubt it. Most likely in plant labor and mixing equipment floor space and maintenance far outweighed the cost of having the vendor do the mixing prior to delivery. The industry as a whole has long sought to outsource what are considered non value added processes. Mixing water with antifreeze fits that bill. The vendor in question has a huge presence in the aftermarket as well as being a supplier for the auto maker’ privately labeled product, and does premix as well as virgin product.No argument on the effectiveness of an engineered control like that, but I bet there was some bitching about the cost.
^^^^^It gets acidic if you let it go too long.
But then it smells funny when I pee.^^^^^
Dude - you have to mix it with asparagus water!
And it happens IMMEDIANTLY.But then it smells funny when I pee.
Yeah, probably a clerk that has dealt with an amazing amount of stupidity walking through the door and is trying to avoid having someone coming back yelling about selling them the wrong coolantAutozone? Consider the source of that advice.
Steve
I just keep the previous empty jug. I buy a new container of straight coolant, pour half into the old jug, top both jugs off with water. Bam! 2 premixed 50/50s, lol.
I prefer being ripped off it it means less time I have to spend. I can make more money, so far nobody has figured out how to live longer as conclusively.Do the parts stores you go to sell distilled water? I don't think I have ever seen it, but it's been a while since I have spent more than a minute or two in one.
So that's another trip. Maybe next door, maybe across town. Some people pay for convenience, some spend a buck to save a penny, some wouldn't dare be "ripped off" like that. To each his own
