sjay Posted June 15 Posted June 15 car is 2017 nissan sentra manual states 7 yrs or 100,000 miles change coolant this car has ONLY 14,000 miles i can't beleive coolant could break down with so few driven milescould some of the experts here have an answer?
swansont Posted June 15 Posted June 15 5 minutes ago, sjay said: car is 2017 nissan sentra manual states 7 yrs or 100,000 miles change coolant this car has ONLY 14,000 miles i can't beleive coolant could break down with so few driven milescould some of the experts here have an answer? It’s 2024. So it’s been 7 years; chemicals do degrade over time.
TheVat Posted June 15 Posted June 15 Antifreeze degrades faster in the bottle than in your car's cooling jacket. They add silicates, which tend to polymerize to a gel in a couple years if the solution is just sitting on a shelf. In a car, the heat/cool cycles and circulation actually prevent that silicate instability. However... The glycol portion degrades in the presence of oxygen, which means if air gets into the cooling system it will break down faster. This process forms acids like glycolic, formic, acetic and oxalic acids. These can corrode the radiator over time. So changing the coolant is a good idea. - former shade tree mechanic
exchemist Posted June 15 Posted June 15 38 minutes ago, sjay said: car is 2017 nissan sentra manual states 7 yrs or 100,000 miles change coolant this car has ONLY 14,000 miles i can't beleive coolant could break down with so few driven milescould some of the experts here have an answer? It's not "breaking down" exactly, but some components may be used up. Anti-freeze also contains things such as corrosion inhibitors which plate out on surfaces and eventually become used up. It's inevitable in cars that there will be different metals in contact with the coolant which can set up electrochemical corrosion over time. There can also be deposits from corrosion that accumulate in the cooling system and should be flushed out so that you don't get blockages in the radiator, for example. It's cheap and easy to flush out and replace the coolant so hardly a big deal to do.
swansont Posted June 15 Posted June 15 1 hour ago, exchemist said: It's not "breaking down" exactly, but some components may be used up. Ethylene glycol doesn't break down? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethylene_glycol "Ethylene glycol ... breaks down in air in about 10 days and in water or soil in a few weeks."
exchemist Posted June 15 Posted June 15 51 minutes ago, swansont said: Ethylene glycol doesn't break down? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethylene_glycol "Ethylene glycol ... breaks down in air in about 10 days and in water or soil in a few weeks." OK, it will oxidise in time in air. But there should not be significant amounts of air in the coolant system.
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