2014 S Maxx
2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!

A_Little_T@b'll_Do_Ya
Looks like we will be here for a couple more days. If you could make it up I’ll buy lunch.Tabaz said:Dale - so glad your original post has sprung legs and is creating a robust discussion. As an aside, breakfast tomorrow morning is out because I confused Lake Pleasant with Roosevelt Lake. You are WAY far away from my location in Phoenix. Can't wait to see where this topic leads!
Since Evans has such a high boiling point it does not create pressure in the system. At operating temperature there pressure build up as there is with water based Coolants. So couldn’t the Alde be a closed circuit also? No pressure no danger. The Evans in my car cools the engine as well as heating the interior simultaneously.Denny16 said:Yes, I agree using this in a auto engine, sounds grand. But I still question is application in the Alde, which is not a sealed cooling system, just the opposite, it is a heating system.
cheers
The fluid will still expand when heated, regardless of its boiling point. That's why the level changes at the reservoir depending on whether the system is cold or hot while running. That expansion in a closed system would create pressure, which the Alde system is not designed for.Dalehelman said:Since Evans has such a high boiling point it does not create pressure in the system. At operating temperature there pressure build up as there is with water based Coolants. So couldn’t the Alde be a closed circuit also? No pressure no danger. The Evans in my car cools the engine as well as heating the interior simultaneously.Denny16 said:Yes, I agree using this in a auto engine, sounds grand. But I still question is application in the Alde, which is not a sealed cooling system, just the opposite, it is a heating system.
cheers
Would depend on what temp the boiler is set at.Tabaz said:Probably a dumb question, but will the Evans fluid get hot enough to heat the cabin?

This is a pretty intriguing suggestion. Let me say up front I have absolutely no knowledge upon which to base an opinion on the use of the Evans coolant, so I'll let others carry on the debate. Hats off to you, Dale, for your willingness to pioneer another T@B innovation.
That said--since the impetus for this suggestion is corrosion protection--I do think it would be beneficial to get a handle on the exact nature of the corrosion currently being seen on the convectors of older T@Bs. Someone recently (@BridgerSunset?) discussed the phenomenon of "deposit corrosion" in which dried salts or other residue trapped under the heater hoses corrodes the aluminum from extended surface contact. While the specific chemistry of this is out of my pay grade, the explanation certainly fits with what I've observed on my own convectors.
How this relates to "regular" galvanic corrosion--and whether the Evans coolant will make any difference in this case--is beyond my ability to predict.
I just finished talking with Mark Stone from Evans