Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I have a toyota with hoses and reservoir bottle have quite a bit of brown corrosion looking scale in them.

I assume this would be in the engine water channels to some degree also.

I am not sure whether to use a product to de-scale the engine. I know sometimes dislodging all that stuff could be worse than actually leaving it.

Going to get all new hoses.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/177651-coolant-flushing/
Share on other sites

Do you get brown coolant aswell? I remember doing a coolant change on my dad's old 4wd and the coolant kept coming out brown and still is. If you've got a similar problem, I would like to know how to fix this also.

Hey Ben

Prevention is always better than cure. I always change the coolant frequently so that the rust inhibitors prevent this from happening in the first place. Then they wont' have corrosion and there is no need to flush it (e.g. my car).

Of course, this doesn't help you in any way.

I have used radiator flushes in the past on many cars with great success. I stick by the nulon brand. I have personally played golf with the owner of Nulon. They have used their engine additive product, dumped it, and driven interstate with no oil in the sump at all. I trust their products.

When I have used the nulon radiator in the flush, it does remove a lot of the rust and scale. When you dump the water out, it is quite dirty.

My advice for you would be (if you are going to use it), to use it for the recommended time. I believe that the products are acid based, so using them for too long might eat lead solder joints etc.

PS: in response to the brown water keep coming out. I've found that after running the flush, the system is then clean. I use coolant with good rust inhibitors and it stays clean

Edited by MANWHORE

Thanks Chris

might give the nulon a go. I'm getting all new hoses as the old ones have heaps of scale. Should probably put the new hoses on then do the nulon otherwise there will be heaps more muck in the system that could damage the water pump etc.

I assume that the scale it dislodges will not affect my new hosesas they won't be so degraded that the scale sticks to them. ANy thoughts on this?

nulon head office is in brookvale right?

I'm not sure where the head office is, but I know there is an office between St Ives/Terrey Hills in the industrial area near Bunnings.

I doubt anything it dislodges will affect the new hoses. With the old hoses, for lack of a better word, they just become crap. Crap stuck on them, brittle rubber etc.

New hoses are nice and luscious. I put new hoses onto my daily driver wagon and ran a flush about a year ago. The mechanics who had worked on it previously had neglected it (as usual - charge you for stuff and not do it). Came up mint and is still clean (radiator and old hoses had this thick white crap and the water was brown). Now, the radiator is still spotless and the coolant is still green. For the price, you can't go wrong (the old ones would probably eventually split anyways). Hoses for main stream cars are only like $20 each or something.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I refreshed the OEM injectors with the kit and connected it up. It now ideals okay even with the IACV removed. Driving still has the same cutoff issue like the 550cc injectors so the issue is somewhere else. I bought FPG's Fuel Pump Hanger. I will be installing it next, but it is not as straightforward as I thought it was with my limited wiring knowledge and no instruction on the specific model I purchased (FPG-089). I also got the incorrect billet clamp as I could not find info on the OEM sizing.
    • Stop looking at the garage floor, and turn the radio up a bit louder if there's any strange noises...
    • No. Turbo shuffle and surge/flutter are not the same thing. Specifically, on a GTR, turbo shuffle has a definite meaning. On a GTR, the twin turbos are assumed to be the same thing and to operate the same way, exactly. In reality, they do not. Their exhaust sides are fed and exhaust a little differently, to each other. Their inlet sides are fed and exhausted a little differently, to each other. Consequently, when they are "working" they are often at slightly different points on the compressor map compared to each other. What this means, particularly when coming on boost, is that one of them will spool up and start producing extra flow compared to the other, which will put back pressure on that other compressor, which will push the operating point on that other compressor up (vertically). This will generally result in it bumping up against the surge line on the map, but even if it doesn't, it upsets the compressor and you get this surging shuffle back and forth between them That is "turbo shuffle" on a GTR. It is related to other flutter effects heard on other turbo systems, but it is a particular feature of the somewhat crappy outlet piping arrangement on RB26s. There are plenty of mods that have been attempted with varying levels of success. People have ground out and/or welded more material into the twin turbo pipe to try to prevent it. Extending the divider inside it works, removing material doesn't. There are aftermarket replacement twin turbo pipes available, and these exist pretty mush purely because of this shuffle problem.
    • You can temporarily* use lock collars to keep it in place until you can do the bushes, back the nuts off, slide them in, snug back up. *temporarily is often for ever
    • Thanks for the quick reply. To be clear, when you say turbo shuffle do you mean turbo flutter "stustustu" or referring to something else? I had thought they were the same thing. When I wrote the post my intention was to say it wasn't a flutter/compression surge sound. My understanding was that a flutter sound would be occurring when throttle is released, whereas I can keep the throttle in the same position for this noise
×
×
  • Create New...