HaHaHa... You were so-worried about the ”proper” mixture you deliberately bastardized it..?In a more modern engine it's not a matter "if" it will cause issues it's "when". Buying some distilled water is a SMALL price to pay to ensure a properly maintained engine. You could also pour cooking oil in your crankcase as well. Doesn't mean it's the right thing to do. Only issue with premix is if you do a flush with plain water there is no way to ensure getting enough out to ensure proper mix ratio. If I am doing simple drain/fill I use premix. It's easier. If doing a full flush I mix 60/40 or even a little "stronger" to ensure proper ratio due to any plain water left in system
I apologize if it hurt your feelings.... that wasn’t my intent...Actually I did NOT bastardize the final mix. Re-read the post. I COMPENSATED for any remaining water in the block after a thorough flush. If I don't flush a cooling system I use premix.
I didn't get my answers from those links, just provided them as a quick point of reference. My response was based on my own experience. Obviously ours differ.I'll stick with my previous answer. Simple? Yes. Factually incorrect? No. Part of my job for 30 years was making water. Lots of it and all kinds of it, but starting with dirty, muddy, lake water that fish and geese crap in, animals of all sorts die in, and people pollute with God only knows what is not as simple as those articles make it sound. My knowledge doesn't come from some incomplete wiki article or an incomplete answer to a basic chemistry lab question.
Use whichever you can find cheapest. I'll say it again----they're basically the same. The final process to achieve them is not.
Didn't hurt anything. Just was using emphasis as I thought you misunderstood my reason for why I mix a little heavier with concentrate after doing a full flush. When I am done my mix comes out quite prefect. There is just no way to know how much plain water stays in the block and other passages so going to a 60/40 tends to make a perfect 50/50 for me.I apologize if it hurt your feelings.... that wasn’t my intent..
I'm aware of that. I'm asking @imnukensc how deionization accomplishes that, or clarifying that it doesn't.easy to get sugar out of water
1) distill the mixture,collect the 'steam', it's pure water
Geez, Louize, being nitpicky, ain't ya? No, deionization doesn't remove nonionized contaminants. That's why sand filters, activated carbon filters, and other filtering methods are used prior to deionization. Are you happy I agreed with you now?I'm aware of that. I'm asking @imnukensc how deionization accomplishes that, or clarifying that it doesn't.
I asked an honest question in the interest of understanding, as I stated, and you still get snippy? (I note that you quoted my response to GreensvilleJay, rather than my question to you).Geez, Louize, being nitpicky, ain't ya? No, deionization doesn't remove nonionized contaminants. That's why sand filters, activated carbon filters, and other filtering methods are used prior to deionization. Are you happy I agreed with you now?
The OP's question was whether to to use DI or distilled water. My answer was to use whichever was cheapest as they are essentially the same product, but the method to achieve them was different.
Good idea.I asked an honest question in the interest of understanding, as I stated, and you still get snippy? (I note that you quoted my response to GreensvilleJay, rather than my question to you).
Precision is very important to me, as is correct understanding. So sorry you find that too "nitpicky".
Regardless, I appreciate you addressing the other part of my question with your answer "That's why sand filters, activated carbon filters, and other filtering methods are used prior to deionization.". That leads me to more questions but I'll just dig around online rather than be more nitpicky with you.
I'm on your page, except my pollutions have been coffee and beers....thousands of both.I refuse to buy pre-mixed/watered-down anti-freeze and always mix my own.
For my first 30 years I used municipal tap-water in all cooling systems without difficulty.
But I have lived the last 30+ years on a water-well bored through 220 feet of limestone. Except for the times I’ve polluted it with coffee and whiskey I’ve drunk untold thousands of gallons of the stuff with no treatment whatsoever other than a particulate filter to strain out any physical residue and the iron-pipe particles which come from my 70 year old house.
That well-water has also been mixed with anti-freeze and run in 11 different cars, trucks and two tractors. The only thing (other than my wifes’ clothes-iron) that has received Distilled water has been lead/acid batteries.
The only failures I’ve suffered (other than one water pump in an old Jeep) have been clothes-irons and lead/acid batteries.
Next time you need a refill come on over and I will give you several gallons of my hard water to try. You are giving bad advice.Tap water historically works just fine for the 2-5 year change-periods specified on most equipment. It’s also cheapest. Kubota (at least for my model M4700) does not specify anything else.
IF you haven’t noticed.... I posted that I live on a well drilled thru 220 feet of limestone. I doubt anyone anywhere has water harder than mine.Next time you need a refill come on over and I will give you several gallons of my hard water to try. You are giving bad advice.