geek nerd weirdo yea. that's you..
^
Make sure you are using the correct type of antifreeze. Mixing some environmentally friendly antifreeze with older type "green" can cause gelling. Some antifreeze will gel with age. You may need to flush the entire system and replace with the correct type for your car.
You can but then the mixture will turn into gel and your entire coolant system will be ruined. If you continue driving your engine will overheat and your car, destroyed.
when you put corn starch in water mix it well throw it in the microwave and you have a gel.
always be careful when adding antifreeze. always add the same color of antifreeze or it will gel up make sure you get the cap on good and make sure there isn't a hole in the line
Mixing a solvent into a latex typically ruins the product. Expected result is the latex paint turning into gel.
You have a leaking transmission cooler, usually part of the radiator. The transmission fluid is mixing with the antifreeze turning it pink.
example of gel is agarose gel,
Bagel gel Bagel gel Bagel gel Bagel gel
buy some belt dressing at autoparts store and just spray it on the belt while it is turning
Gel Electrophoresis
Generally, you should have about a 50/50 (%) mixed of antifreeze and distilled water. GM recommends using Dexcool antifreeze. I would recommend that you use whatever antifreeze that is in there now and stick with the 50/50 mix. Take Care, Greg Also take care that if your van came with Dexcool (red in color) DO NOT add normal anti-freeze (green) to it. The Dexcool is lifetime antifreeze, and it will GEL if you add normall to it and bye bye engine. If it's red top up with Dexcool, or flush and refill with normal. Regards Brash911
Antifreeze is molecular.