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Redline water wetter??
by
subsonic
on 30 May, 2007 16:41
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Saw this on sale the other day. Read a bit of litature on it. Anyone here using it? Does it really work?
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#1
by
jimfoo
on 30 May, 2007 19:15
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It works, but it works best on straight water. It will mildly reduce temps in an anti-freeze mixture, I think 5-10 degrees depending on mixture.
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#2
by
BellCityDubber
on 31 May, 2007 00:29
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Saw this on sale the other day. Read a bit of litature on it. Anyone here using it? Does it really work?
Most bigger commercial/heavy duty diesels run SCA (supplemental cooling additivies) as recommended by the manufacturer...
I've always sworn by water wetter... I've noticed a difference.. and I run a more water than coolant mixture in the warmer months... it seems to work excellent.
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#3
by
HarryMann
on 01 Jun, 2007 01:05
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Some Subaru owners use it as they can have a tendency to air-pocket within the heads, and they don't like that, at all, at all..
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#4
by
Caddyman
on 04 Jun, 2007 15:24
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Works great. I use it in all my vehicles and in my liquid cooled computer. What is really neat to watch is the affect after putting it in the system, smooths flow out and quiets the pump down (along with decreased temperatures).
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#5
by
MaxHedrm
on 04 Jun, 2007 15:43
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Just be careful what coolant you run it with. It isn't compatible with everything.
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#6
by
xud9te
on 04 Jun, 2007 15:56
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I heard from a friend who used to work for a chemical testing company that dishwasher cleaning tablets were the same thing as water wetter!!
Havent tried it though..
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#7
by
jimfoo
on 04 Jun, 2007 20:23
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Yes, I have heard that rinse aid, like Jet Dry, work similarly.
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#8
by
red64chevelle
on 05 Jun, 2007 05:22
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I have used water wetter on my old EcoDiesel, Chevys, and dirt bikes. It has worked for all of them. Rhode Island does not get as cold as it does further up north, so I don't have to run as high of a coolant ratio, so it might help the southern people more than the northern people.