Re: WaterWetter Products
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Dale |
Re: WaterWetter Products
Does it work? Very well. I was first introduced to it in 1971 by my next door neighbor who was the local fire chief but he was also the fire chief at a Mobil Oil Refinery he gave me a lesion on it. According to him it was developed or found its way to Fire Departments. It was used in water tankers where water was in short supply. Mobil used to buy it 55 gal drums. According to him it is a big help in putting out fires. I have used it over the years and works great for cooling BUT if you have a coolant leak or a
casting leak it will find the leak! Quote:
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Re: WaterWetter Products
Just remember the purer the water is the more aggressive it is. Distiller water should be treated with something to inhibit corrosion in the cooling system, I think water wetter might do that if I remember.
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Re: WaterWetter Products
If you read the instructions on the Lucas Coolant Additive it says do not use distilled water. I called them and also did some research which is why I use filtered drinking water, not spring water.
I was having a rust issue every year. I was using distilled water and tried every additive from water pump lube to Water Wetter and combinations of them. Still had rust every year when I drained to put antifreeze in for the winter. When I purchased the Lucas I was all set to use distilled water until I read the instructions. Used filtered drinking water and for the past 2 years no rust at all. This is with an iron headed SBC. Your results may vary and many swear distilled is the only way to go, but I know what works for me. |
Re: WaterWetter Products
I was once told that water wetter type additives didn't let the heat transfer to the water,so water was cooler but the engine casting itself were hotter, is there any truth to that?
Mike Taylor 3601 |
Re: WaterWetter Products
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WaterWetter is basically like a soap. Changes behavior of water allowing it to break down oils making the water spread more to clean the surface. They have a foam version of this at military and civilian airports. D |
Re: WaterWetter Products
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Dale |
Re: WaterWetter Products
tried it in several vehicles since the late 70s and over 3 decades. In street cars, street/strip cars and race cars, with 50/50 anti freeze and with straight water. Never saw a reduction in operating temperture in any of them. I'm long over donating my $ to redline. Today, my race cars run straight water and my passenger vehicles a 50/50 mix of antifreeze and water. None have have waterwetter in the cooling system.
http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/200...%C2%AE-review/ |
Re: WaterWetter Products
I have often wondered about the increased cooling of the product but to be honest I am more concerned about its ability to help with rust and corrosion. I don't like to run antifreeze in my street cars at the track for obvious reasons and wanted a product to help combat corrosion and that I could leave in all summer. Anybody have any thoughts or experience on this?
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Re: WaterWetter Products
Interesting comments...
One of the comments mentioned if you are using a Thermostat. The temperature will modulate to the thermostats rating. Which is logical. I towed with my Caprice wagon up and down the Appalachia Mountains with no overheating issues without the Water-Wetter product. Pull about 6000 plus lbs. Car, trailer, racing stuff with a 4600lb Caprice Wagon in the heat. Wagon Loaded, full tank and me is 4800 lbs. Engine will ping pushing 70mph up the long sustained hills. Backing down to 65mph was fine. Figure some mid octane would be helpful. Been suggested to flush the Coolant system thoroughly. If Anti Freeze is clean does it really need to be changed every 2 years or 25,000 miles? Dan |
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