News:

We have implemented a Photo Gallery for hosting images right here on SAACFORUM. Check the How-To in News from HQ

Main Menu

Anyone run Evans waterless coolant

Started by FL SAAC, July 03, 2020, 12:13:54 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

FL SAAC

Any benefits on using this vs anti freeze on a street car ?
When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love. ~
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus

Home of the Amazing Hertz 3 + 1 Musketeers

I have all UNGOLD cars

The Going Thing

No. The other issue is that you can't have ANY residual water or coolant in the system or it reacts.   I personally run  Royal Purple water wetter and distilled water.
I rarely see over 190 unless I am dealing with an extended idling condition.

shelbydoug

Quote from: The Going Thing on July 03, 2020, 12:54:35 PM
No. The other issue is that you can't have ANY residual water or coolant in the system or it reacts.   I personally run  Royal Purple water wetter and distilled water.
I rarely see over 190 unless I am dealing with an extended idling condition.

What thermostat?
68 GT350 Lives Matter!

427heaven

For a street car fresh coolant, what ever is on sale is all that's needed. Check all cooling items are functioning as they should. High volume water pump, fan shroud, hoses, etc. I run a plate system eliminating the t-stat. you can get a pack of 4- hole sizes from 1/2. 5/8. 3/4. 1 inch we don't freeze too often so it works great with performance motors that need heat regulation. You change the hole size to fit your application... Works wonderful !

68gtcoupe

Quote from: The Going Thing on July 03, 2020, 12:54:35 PM
No. The other issue is that you can't have ANY residual water or coolant in the system or it reacts.   I personally run  Royal Purple water wetter and distilled water.
I rarely see over 190 unless I am dealing with an extended idling condition.

+1 on the Royal Purple Ice.  I live in NH, the car sits in an unheated garage all winter so I use 50/50 mix of Prestone and distilled water.  No issues at all with overheating. 

The Going Thing

I am running a high flow Stewart EMP 180 degree thermostat.

557

Quote from: 427heaven on July 03, 2020, 03:32:37 PM
For a street car fresh coolant, what ever is on sale is all that's needed. Check all cooling items are functioning as they should. High volume water pump, fan shroud, hoses, etc. I run a plate system eliminating the t-stat. you can get a pack of 4- hole sizes from 1/2. 5/8. 3/4. 1 inch we don't freeze too often so it works great with performance motors that need heat regulation. You change the hole size to fit your application... Works wonderful !
.    Didn't they used to call that a blanking plate or some such???

2112

Of course the best solution is a deeper, extra core, extra fins radiator.

You can have one built using stock top and bottom tanks to look really close to stock.

427heaven

When I was running my stock car roundy rounder at 6200 rpm it would get hot by race end. The water pump needed to slow down or slow the circulation down in my engine. The class dictated it needed to run components that were like factory components. After market parts not allowed, looking around I happened upon these little beauties and slowed the cavitating fluid in my cooling system. Water wetter is allowed at most race tracks because it is not coolant as we think of it. and it dries like water. My car ran at 220 with out water wetter 200 with it . Great stuff.

The Going Thing

I have factory tanks on a heavy duty 3 row core. It works well.

camp upshur

#10
For the lazy old iron on this site: no.
Evans NPG is efficacious. It is based upon reducing superheated skin surface boiling adjacent to the combustion chamber utilizing nucleate boiling. This can near eliminate localized boiling and resultant 'black death' (aluminium thermal piston expansion/ sleeve scuffing -dead hole). With it you do not run a thermostat. Pessurization and temperature are meaningless when employing Evans NPG. It works.
Not really applicable in normally aspirated applications, save for certain off-roaders or esoteric military applications such as the recon teams/ MARSOC who use it.

FL SAAC

Gentlemen thank you for your contributions,  much appreciated
When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love. ~
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus

Home of the Amazing Hertz 3 + 1 Musketeers

I have all UNGOLD cars

69mach351w

Quote from: 427heaven on July 03, 2020, 03:32:37 PM
For a street car fresh coolant, what ever is on sale is all that's needed. Check all cooling items are functioning as they should. High volume water pump, fan shroud, hoses, etc. I run a plate system eliminating the t-stat. you can get a pack of 4- hole sizes from 1/2. 5/8. 3/4. 1 inch we don't freeze too often so it works great with performance motors that need heat regulation. You change the hole size to fit your application... Works wonderful !
I ran the t-stat housing washer, specifically for high rev engines, in my race car. Bought them from Jeg's. Different sizes like 427 mentions.

Without anything there in place of the t-stat, the liquid will run to fast through the radiator and not have time to cool.

The Going Thing

The EMP Stewart thermostats are great for street-driven cars. They are high flow design but do very well regulating the flow.  I don't recommend the Mr. Gasket copy. Buy the real deal. I had the rubber seals cause one to hang open.

TA Coupe

#14
Quote from: 557 on July 03, 2020, 07:03:11 PM
Quote from: 427heaven on July 03, 2020, 03:32:37 PM
For a street car fresh coolant, what ever is on sale is all that's needed. Check all cooling items are functioning as they should. High volume water pump, fan shroud, hoses, etc. I run a plate system eliminating the t-stat. you can get a pack of 4- hole sizes from 1/2. 5/8. 3/4. 1 inch we don't freeze too often so it works great with performance motors that need heat regulation. You change the hole size to fit your application... Works wonderful !
.    Didn't they used to call that a blanking plate or some such???

Just called water restrictor

https://www.speedwaymotors.com/Water-Outlet-Restrictor-Kit,605.html

    Roy
If it starts it's streetable.
Overkill is just enough.