Hey Chebby guys...need a little help

Cowgirl

Well-Known Member
The heater core was plugged up. Apparently someone mixed orange and green antifreeze together and it got all gummed up. The system was getting airlocked or something. :shrug:

BF keeps grumbling about Chevys. :lol: The power steering pump broke the next day...with only 100K on the truck.
 
The heater core was plugged up. Apparently someone mixed orange and green antifreeze together and it got all gummed up. The system was getting airlocked or something. :shrug:

BF keeps grumbling about Chevys. :lol: The power steering pump broke the next day...with only 100K on the truck.

Anyone should know those two colors clash. .....:lmao:

Thanks for the follow up, good to learn stuff. You made me look it up.
Most of the antifreeze products on the market currently are ethylene glycol base material with additives to prevent corrosion, lubricate seals and water pumps and aid in heat transfer to the coolant from the metal of the engine. Antifreeze should be mixed with distilled water (tap water contains high amounts of minerals such as calcium and iron that can precipitate and coat internal parts) at the ratio of one part antifreeze to one part water. This gives freeze protection down to minus 34 degrees and boil-over protection up to +265 degrees. Never use pure antifreeze in a cooling system without using at least 30 percent water in the mixture. Most antifreeze products sold for the past several years have been the traditional "green" coolant. This type is good for two to three years and up to 30,000 miles. The green antifreeze contains silicates, phosphates and / or borates as corrosion inhibitors to keep the solution alkaline. As long as the solution remains alkaline, corrosion is controlled and the system is protected. Over time, the corrosion inhibitors will be depleted and the corrosion protection is lost. It is for this reason that green antifreeze should be changed every two years or so. Aluminum is especially vulnerable to corrosion and many vehicles have heads, radiators and other aluminum components in the cooling system. If the coolant in an engine cooling system is changed before corrosion inhibitors reach dangerously low levels, corrosion damage is prevented.

An alternative to tradition green antifreeze is a product currently used by many engine manufacturers. "Orange" antifreeze is a long life or extended life type of antifreeze used to increase the useful life of engine coolant. It is ethylene glycol base as is the green antifreeze. The difference between the two colors is that orange antifreeze contains a different type of corrosion inhibitor that has a much longer service life than silicates, phosphates and borates. Orange antifreeze contains organic acids that protect engine parts from corrosion. Silicate (green) type antifreeze does not mix with orange type antifreeze. Never mix the two colors in a cooling system. The organic acids in orange types will cause precipitation of silicates in the green type and corrosion protection is greatly reduced. Orange type antifreezes are good for five years or 100,000/150,000 miles in newer vehicles (1996 and later). They can be used in many older vehicles (ask your vehicle dealer if it is safe to use orange antifreeze) if all of the green mixture is flushed from the system and is replaced with the orange mixture. Useful life is about four years or 60,000 miles in older cars.

Toyota uses a red antifreeze in many of its products and should not be confused with the orange type long life antifreezes. It is essentially the green type of antifreeze that contains red dye to give it the red color.
I guess they probably flushed the whole system?
 
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Dupontster

Would THIS face lie?
The heater core was plugged up. Apparently someone mixed orange and green antifreeze together and it got all gummed up. The system was getting airlocked or something. :shrug:

BF keeps grumbling about Chevys. :lol: The power steering pump broke the next day...with only 100K on the truck.

AH HA....You didn't tell us THAT....BTW, Ford power steering pumps go bad too...:razz:
 

Dupontster

Would THIS face lie?
:buddies:

Maybe you can help me with my problem. When I take my wife to work in the morning I hear a loud, highly irritating noise when I go too fast or follow too close. On the way home the noise isn't there. What gives?


Maybe she is tired from a hard day at the office...runningforcover
 

Cowgirl

Well-Known Member
:buddies:

Maybe you can help me with my problem. When I take my wife to work in the morning I hear a loud, highly irritating noise when I go too fast or follow too close. On the way home the noise isn't there. What gives?

I looked in the instruction manual....it said "Operator Error."
































:lmao: I had to stick up for BSGal. I lub her.
 

BS Gal

Voted Nicest in 08
:buddies:

Maybe you can help me with my problem. When I take my wife to work in the morning I hear a loud, highly irritating noise when I go too fast or follow too close. On the way home the noise isn't there. What gives?

:buttkick: But remember the trip to Pensacola where I was very quiet and didn't slam on my personal brake on the passenger side? You can thank the good doctor for my calm attitude on THAT trip......He must have been thinking about his wife when he dutifully wrote out the prescription.
 
:buttkick: But remember the trip to Pensacola where I was very quiet and didn't slam on my personal brake on the passenger side? You can thank the good doctor for my calm attitude on THAT trip......He must have been thinking about his wife when he dutifully wrote out the prescription.

You were along for that trip?:faint:
 

Mikeinsmd

New Member
:buddies:

Maybe you can help me with my problem. When I take my wife to work in the morning I hear a loud, highly irritating noise when I go too fast or follow too close. On the way home the noise isn't there. What gives?
Was it a very annoying sound like nails on a chalkboard? Did you get a headache from it?
 
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