Flush all coolant from system by loosening lower rad hose (when cool) and catching all fluid with a bucket. Use a garden hose to flush radiator from upper cap. When drained and flushed fill with 50/50 coolant/water.
yes, but you need to get rid of all of the dex-cool first... needs flushed really really good then you can replace the cool with normall cool (green). Now there are some Universal Antifreeze that will mix with dex-cool. that coolant says on the bottle ANY COLOR, ANY MAKE, ANY MODEL....
The "antifreeze smell out the AC vents" would mean only one thing, you have a small leak in the heater core.
Actually, this is to be expected when one considers that ethylene glycol, the principal component of most antifreezes, freezes at 8 degrees above zero, Fahrenheit. It is only when water is added that the freezing point is depressed. The freezing point of an ethylene glycol and water mixture drops rapidly as the concentration of glycol is increased to a mixture of about 60% antifreeze and 40% water. Around that point, an abrupt turnabout occurs, and as more antifreeze is added, the freezing point rises almost as fast as it had previously dropped. It's clearly a case of what you don't know can hurt you, but I have never seen an antifreeze container with an explanatory note to this effect. It must have leakage somewhere. When it gets cold the antifreeze contracs. That is why there is a bottle next to the radiator that has two marks COLD and hot. the level should be in between these. If it is not and way off then you have a leak somewhere. Leak may be small, may be in the hadgasket (no good), look under the car to see if any green or colr fluid is under overnite. Did you unscrew the radiator cap and forget to tighten it roccetly?
If the top is left off of the container it would smell up the whole house.
It depends on the size of the bottle. According to the International Bottled Water Association's website, the average gram weight of the 16.9 ounce "single serve" bottled water container has declined from 18.9 grams in 2000 to 12.7 grams in 2008.
Decanting is the pouring of a liquid (typically wine) from its bottle to another container for serving.
I'm pretty sure that you hold the reagent bottle by the base. Like the main part of the bottle, veresus the neck or bottom.
No, as long as you don't make a habit of it. Don't put antifreeze in your washer bottle. It will smear when the wipers come on.
A funnel is used to help pour liquid from one container to another without spilling. I use a funnel when pouring oil back into a bottle for storage, or when filling a burette from a small reagent bottle.
metal expands due to the rise in heat making it bigger than the actual container (slightly) making it easier to take off
Touching one container opening to the other container's opening as the bottle is tipped up to start the flow of the liquid will (1) steady the "aim" and delivery rate of the liquid from the bottle; and (2) the connection will take advantage of the liquid's surface tension to promote smooth and controlled flow. The use of a stirring rod from one container to another will produce similar results.
you open the plastic bottle and pour in the antifreeze
Antifreeze has to be put in at the overflow bottle.
The "contents" are the item inside a bottle or container.
in the expansion bottle
Please restate your question as I do not understand what you mean. What bottle are you talking about that you poured the antifreeze in? A few drops leak where, from the bottle?
A glass bottle is used as a container for many reagents.