Garden hose on the inside of the rad pointing forward to encourage the mud to exit the way it came in will also help your cause for coolness
No you want the best for the VM
Quote from: bigjeepzj on May 19, 2014, 03:53:30 PMNo you want the best for the VM ...stick with the best stuff.
OAT is for mixed alloy engines so if you have a engine forged from a lump of cast iron, there's no point, get a decent make that's designed for the older stuff as alloy and iron corrosion are two different things, personally I would go decent make of blue and if your motor runs on the warm side normally go a 50/50 mix ( i used to when running LPG in the past), if it runs spot on temp wise do a more normal 30/35% mix
Quote from: georgen on May 19, 2014, 04:23:57 PMOAT is for mixed alloy engines so if you have a engine forged from a lump of cast iron, there's no point, get a decent make that's designed for the older stuff as alloy and iron corrosion are two different things, personally I would go decent make of blue and if your motor runs on the warm side normally go a 50/50 mix ( i used to when running LPG in the past), if it runs spot on temp wise do a more normal 30/35% mix OAT was designed as an organically sympathetic antifreeze where it will not harm the environment. the blue and old stuff needs to be recycled properly and not binned down the drain. the antifreeze may be designed for newer engines but it is still good for older engines, 50/50 mix is a standard at least then you do not have to worry about winter too much