Lou C
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2002
- Messages
- 12,693
If you use antifreeze to winterize (and there is as much debate on this point, as there is on motor oils), but let's just say Mercruiser has recommended it for years....for the purpose of reducing corrosion...not freeze protection per se....you always manually drain first...here's another I think better choice than the standard Marine and RV antifreezes....for one thing...the only marine antifreeze I feel comfortable using is -100 (burst temp) because this stays liquid well down to below zero, vs the -50 and -60 which start to get hard slightly above zero. Now they don't expand, but I still think having a hard substance in a cast iron block or manifolds, is risky. Maybe OK for PVC pipe but for cast iron....the issue is....the -100 is usually between 12 and 14 bucks a gallon.....
So last year I started looking around for Sierra PG antifreeze, this is an engine antifreeze not just for storage, that is no tox propylene glycol. The difference between PG and EG (toxic) is that the PG does not provide as much boil over or freeze protection at the extremes of hot and cold. But, for this purpose, mixed at 50/50, it gives you freeze protection to -26*F. So I buy 3 gallons of the Sierra at $15/gallon, mixed 50/50 that brings the cost of each gallon down to $7.50. This will make 6 gallons of AF which is more than enough to do the job...price wise it works out to only a bit more than the -60 stuff. Used it last year to winterize and just mixed up my batch for this year's winterization. In New York you can find it at ACE Hardware and a few auto parts stores. You can go even higher if it gets colder where you are in terms of AF vs water.....I think this stuff protects better at a better price.
PS on another marine parts website when discussing the various antifreezes they sell...
for -50, it is recommended for low temps between 14-18*F
for -60, it is recommended for low temps between 7-10*F
for colder regions (that includes us since we do get colder as low as zero or slightly below) they recommend the -100.
Most people probably use the -60, but to me that's cutting it too close....
So last year I started looking around for Sierra PG antifreeze, this is an engine antifreeze not just for storage, that is no tox propylene glycol. The difference between PG and EG (toxic) is that the PG does not provide as much boil over or freeze protection at the extremes of hot and cold. But, for this purpose, mixed at 50/50, it gives you freeze protection to -26*F. So I buy 3 gallons of the Sierra at $15/gallon, mixed 50/50 that brings the cost of each gallon down to $7.50. This will make 6 gallons of AF which is more than enough to do the job...price wise it works out to only a bit more than the -60 stuff. Used it last year to winterize and just mixed up my batch for this year's winterization. In New York you can find it at ACE Hardware and a few auto parts stores. You can go even higher if it gets colder where you are in terms of AF vs water.....I think this stuff protects better at a better price.
PS on another marine parts website when discussing the various antifreezes they sell...
for -50, it is recommended for low temps between 14-18*F
for -60, it is recommended for low temps between 7-10*F
for colder regions (that includes us since we do get colder as low as zero or slightly below) they recommend the -100.
Most people probably use the -60, but to me that's cutting it too close....
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