mcmxi
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***Current*** M6060HDC, MX6000HSTC & GL7000 ***Sold*** MX6000HST & BX25DLB
I bet that most of the corrosion in a cooling system occurs when there's no flow of coolant around the system. Intermetallic particles in the bulk metal can become strong cathodes with the surrounding parent metal being the anode. But that type of pitting corrosion requires a specific and often local pH range that could occur if the flow is stagnated. Eventually, after enough pitting and undercutting, the intermetallic particle falls out and corrosion in that area stops.The MSDS lists hydrated inorganic acids and organic acids in some unspecified quantites. The specific chemistry is "proprietary".
The Kubota sales brochhure is more specific = no silicates, borates, phosphates, or nitrites. That rules out IAT chemistry that relies on phosphates and silicates that form a protective coating on the surfaces of the cooling system.
There is no doubt its fundamentally OAT extended life chemistry which typically relies on carboxylates as inhibitors. Carboxylates are neutralized salts of organic acids that inhibit corrosion by interacting chemically at the sites of metallic corrosion rather than totaling coating the entire surface of the cooling system.
IAT coolant chemistry is as dead as nondetergent engine oils.
Dan
If you ever look at metal alloys using a SEM you'll find a lot of intermetallic particles in the matrix e.g. pure Cu, Zn, Pt etc.
Anyway, I'm going to continue using the coolant that the local Kubota dealer sells which is the NAPA stuff that I showed above.