Fallon
Super Member
Unless a drain has a stub that you can get a hose temporarily pushed onto, I usually end up with fluid splattering, or maybe I'm just not that good at this gameyet.....
It may not be relevant to your situation Ralph, but I've seen these used to drain (big) transformers of oil - a kids hard-sided plastic wading pool. The plastic is strong enough to handle 10" or so of water, but low cost, and easy enough to trim for clearance.....
You may have your new coolant sourced already, but given your site, consider non-toxic formulas if it meets spec. If I had taken better notes in Chem 201, I might recall the formulation, but one place I've seen it listed is Amsoil.
Rgds, D.
Ethylene Glycol is the green stuff & classic automotive antifreeze. Apparently it tastes super sweet & even small amounts will destroy your liver.
Polypropylene Glycol is RV antifreeze & usually dyed pink. It's actually a food additive in candybars & other stuff, so non-toxic. Not sure how well it holds up to automotive uses. I suspect it doesn't cool as well or breaks down at higher temps.
I don't recall what the other newer long life automotive antifreeze is, or if it's just slightly different additive packages in Ethelene Glycol.