Damn I'm glad I live in SoCal, the low today is like 48°F
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Frozen coolant
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It was -40 here today my car barley started.
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Originally posted by Mr_Tripp View PostI'd pay for a smog checks twice a year before I moved to a state where I wake up to negative anything.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N900A using TapatalkCurrent:
1989 325i
1988 M3
1987 325ic
Past:
2001 330ci
2001 M3
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Originally posted by jlevie View PostThat coolant mix sounds pretty iffy for New Jersey. A 60:40 dilution using 50:50 mix yields about an 80:20 coolant. Which is only good to 14F.Originally posted by TSI♫ Rust flecks are falling on my head...♫OEM+
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As long as you let the car run and the T-Stat open, you should be fine.
This reminds me of some super old school stuff...
Time used to be that a lot of cars ran summer/winter coolant mixes. Something we don't give a whole lot of thought about these days.www.truegearhead.com
- bad decisions & questionable cars
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Originally posted by fronton View PostTrue for a garaged situation, not for outdoors. Think about how a radiator works.
Easy quick example. Your outside temp gauge/readout if you have one on a car. driving down the road in even 25 degree weather, at 60mph, if wind chill affected it, it would read 3 degrees.
Also, even thought the hoses expanded and may have popped off or are leaking. This does not guarantee your block is okay. You can have ice in place, and not in another. Hoses typically do freeze before the block, which can cause a blockage in the block, and when that ice expands, everything can get screwed. Especially cylinders if the water jacket it pretty large. Ice expands in all directions, taking the least opposing path.
Not always the case. But, living up north has taught everyone to never let their blocks freeze. Even slight freezing can destroy everything. The fact that your CORE plugs haven't popped out, is actually reason for concern. They are not "freeze" plugs, that's just a commonly used name. They are leftover holes in the engine from the sand casting process to create the block. They are not intended to relieve pressure in a frozen coolant condition. Something else could've given way. Do not rely on them for any measure of block integrity.
Heat it up. Mix some proper coolant, and do it now, before more (possibly very bad) damage could happen, if it hasn't already. OR at the very least heat it up, and drain it all. Chances are it's fine, but why risk it if you don't have to.
Originally posted by ReallyDirtyThirty View PostTime used to be that a lot of cars ran summer/winter coolant mixes. Something we don't give a whole lot of thought about these days.Last edited by TurboJake; 01-06-2014, 03:35 PM.
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Originally posted by TurboJake View PostStories of my grandfather having to drain the oil and coolant every night when parking the Hudson, bring it inside to keep it warm, and refill the next day are pretty abundant in my family.
"That bitch would freeze up in the middle of summer, on the EQUATOR!"'84 318i - Lapisblau/Schwarz (in cryosleep)
'06 330i - Titansilber/Schwarz
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Small update: I reconnected the hoses and added a bunch of coolant and a some distilled water so the mixture is probably around 60/40 coolant heavy. No leakage anywhere. Should I now drain everything for the rest of the winter or leave it as is with more coolant now?
I also have a 60watt bulb on under the engine for the night and until temps get to 20F+
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