
ROCKERDAN
OCD Sledhead
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2005
- Messages
- 7,496
- Reaction score
- 3,609
- Points
- 2,003
- Location
- Huntsville Ontario & Niagara NY
- Country
- Other
- Snowmobile
- '18 RTX 50th "Winder"
hey guys,
last week my temp light came on running hardpack for about 4-5 miles at about 60-70mph....there was plenty to cool the sled and all others had no issues,by no mean was the snow tight or frozen....so i was abit worried.
I used the search button from this AWESOME site and found all kinds of threads on coolant,water wetter ect ect...
As i read from others here about coolant being straight anti freeze,I figured i should check mine out...I tested it and sure enough it was good till 65 below F or in other words,straight anti-freeze!...you can tell just by the feel and look of it...So,next thing to do was get about half of it out of there to create a nice 50/50 mix.Easier said then done!.
I first syphoned out as much as i could from the reservoir,this was not even equal to 1 liter,so i had to do more...I removed a hose from small radiator and got more out..still wasnt enough...So what i did was started adding deionized water to the reservoir,running sled to mix it,then syphoning...what a pain in butt...
anyway,i ended up getting about 3 liters out,which is about half as the manual shows the total coolant capacity to be 6 liters.
I then added 6 oz of water wetter(made by redline) and finished up,checked to be sure and it is now set for about minus 30f which should be plenty for my region.
I can see now why it overheated,straight antifreeze is terrable at cooling,while a 50/50 or 60/40 mix with deionized water works much better...that along with the extra insurance of water wetter should take care of my problem.
If any of you guys have had temp light come on,i would first do what i did here,before adding another heat exchanger....if you still have cooling issues then you might need the extra exchanger.
Dan
last week my temp light came on running hardpack for about 4-5 miles at about 60-70mph....there was plenty to cool the sled and all others had no issues,by no mean was the snow tight or frozen....so i was abit worried.
I used the search button from this AWESOME site and found all kinds of threads on coolant,water wetter ect ect...
As i read from others here about coolant being straight anti freeze,I figured i should check mine out...I tested it and sure enough it was good till 65 below F or in other words,straight anti-freeze!...you can tell just by the feel and look of it...So,next thing to do was get about half of it out of there to create a nice 50/50 mix.Easier said then done!.
I first syphoned out as much as i could from the reservoir,this was not even equal to 1 liter,so i had to do more...I removed a hose from small radiator and got more out..still wasnt enough...So what i did was started adding deionized water to the reservoir,running sled to mix it,then syphoning...what a pain in butt...
anyway,i ended up getting about 3 liters out,which is about half as the manual shows the total coolant capacity to be 6 liters.
I then added 6 oz of water wetter(made by redline) and finished up,checked to be sure and it is now set for about minus 30f which should be plenty for my region.
I can see now why it overheated,straight antifreeze is terrable at cooling,while a 50/50 or 60/40 mix with deionized water works much better...that along with the extra insurance of water wetter should take care of my problem.
If any of you guys have had temp light come on,i would first do what i did here,before adding another heat exchanger....if you still have cooling issues then you might need the extra exchanger.
Dan
