Autotecheng
Automotive
- May 6, 2012
- 11
Hello, my question is about air in engine cooling systems.
Coolant is formulated to resist boiling, and furthermore kept under pressure to increase its boiling point. I think this is to control its phase. In other words we must prevent coolant from boiling (vaporizing) because vapor does not conduct heat away from the engine very well, right?
What I want to know is how air affects the coolant's tendency to boil, and does it reduce its boiling point or reduce its ability to conduct heat?
There are tools available for draining and refilling the cooling system that work by drawing a vacuum of about 26inhg and "sucking" all of the coolant out, then using the vacuum to draw the new coolant in. Their manufacturers claim that cooling systems can have air pockets trapped in high points in the engine which lead to localized overheating. The highest points of the cooling system generally seem to be the water jacketed areas around the combustion chamber where cooling is most important.
My gut feeling is that if the normal expansion and contraction of the coolant pulls air into the system from a leak or from a low reservoir level that the air will dissolve into the coolant when the system increases in pressure, and migrate into the engine, where it will separate and dwell. My intuition says that air contamination will increase the tendency to boil.
Based on that I'm thinking I should pressurize the system and cap to its rating to check for leaks, but also drain and refill it with fresh coolant and check for leaks a second time under vacuum as the best maintenance practice.
What do you think?
Coolant is formulated to resist boiling, and furthermore kept under pressure to increase its boiling point. I think this is to control its phase. In other words we must prevent coolant from boiling (vaporizing) because vapor does not conduct heat away from the engine very well, right?
What I want to know is how air affects the coolant's tendency to boil, and does it reduce its boiling point or reduce its ability to conduct heat?
There are tools available for draining and refilling the cooling system that work by drawing a vacuum of about 26inhg and "sucking" all of the coolant out, then using the vacuum to draw the new coolant in. Their manufacturers claim that cooling systems can have air pockets trapped in high points in the engine which lead to localized overheating. The highest points of the cooling system generally seem to be the water jacketed areas around the combustion chamber where cooling is most important.
My gut feeling is that if the normal expansion and contraction of the coolant pulls air into the system from a leak or from a low reservoir level that the air will dissolve into the coolant when the system increases in pressure, and migrate into the engine, where it will separate and dwell. My intuition says that air contamination will increase the tendency to boil.
Based on that I'm thinking I should pressurize the system and cap to its rating to check for leaks, but also drain and refill it with fresh coolant and check for leaks a second time under vacuum as the best maintenance practice.
What do you think?