So for a few seasons I've been wanting to run a test on the RV antifreeze many of us use in our boat engines. I've had a theory that the antifreeze dilution was not as significant as most people thought.
So for my test I mixed RV antifreeze at ratios of 20%, 40%, 60%, 80% and 100%. The product itself is rated as "burst proof to -50C"
Here are the results from my testing this week at -25C
In every dilution the vessel survived (glass jars) except in the case of 0% (water).
In every dilution the product was no longer a liquid. It got progressively harder as the dilution decreased. Surprisingly even at 100% the product was an immovable "slush". I didn't expect that.
It appears that the RV antifreeze becomes a gel even at warmer temps. However it prevents expansion and that is what matters most.
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So what's the take away? Well even at these frigid temps I think even a 50/50 mixture would keep your boat safe. If it doesn't get this cold where you are I think you could run in antifreeze without draining your block and be fine.
So for my test I mixed RV antifreeze at ratios of 20%, 40%, 60%, 80% and 100%. The product itself is rated as "burst proof to -50C"
Here are the results from my testing this week at -25C
In every dilution the vessel survived (glass jars) except in the case of 0% (water).
In every dilution the product was no longer a liquid. It got progressively harder as the dilution decreased. Surprisingly even at 100% the product was an immovable "slush". I didn't expect that.
It appears that the RV antifreeze becomes a gel even at warmer temps. However it prevents expansion and that is what matters most.
----
So what's the take away? Well even at these frigid temps I think even a 50/50 mixture would keep your boat safe. If it doesn't get this cold where you are I think you could run in antifreeze without draining your block and be fine.
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