If the radiator is not being pressurized from exaust than it should. As long as the coolant is going out of the system either in the oil or out the exaust it has always worked for me. If exaust is getting into the coolant the liquid glass has no chance to plug the leak. With the engine cold, take the radiator cap off and crank the motor. You will know quickly if it will work. Water either shoots out the radiator or doesn't.
Liquid in glass thermometers are fragile.For precise work, they need to be recalibrated frequently.
the heat makes it expand you see
Your best bet is to FIX the leak. You are asking for real trouble if you add liquid glass. It will coat the sensors and they will not work properly.
water!
Because when water ansd glass are put together and they are kind of work like a magnafine glass. ^^ what do you mean by glass..?
The pulse glass contains a volatile liquid and vapor at low pressure. Warm one bulb in your hand and the increased vapor pressure will force the liquid into the other bulb and appear to boil.
Lenses operate on having another index than the immediate surrounding. Sink a lens in a media with the same index and it won't work. It'll be like it's all glass.
I would imagine water is a good to drink. In any case.
Plasmas work by lighting up gases in a glass tube. LCDs work by lighting up "liquid" pixels individually.
Water is a liquid for starters... & The definition of a liquid is "A matter that has a definite volume but NO definite shape." Therefore it's shape can move around.
Condensation is the process where water vapor comes together to form liquid water (or any other liquid).
Buoyancy can work in any liquid provided that the object floating weighs less than the liquid it displaces. This is true regardless of whether it is water or not! Buoyancy works in any fluid. The fluid can be any liquid, or any gas.