JimAttrill
New Member
You did follow that link from this guy in Alaska? Anyway, the answer is 100% Ethylene Glycol ie. no water at all. That will freeze at +8F or -13C which won't bother you in Cornwall much (or me) But I never knew that.
Glycols do not have sharp freezing points, and even below the freezing temperatures, a slushy solution exists which will still flow. In the never-never transition zone around -60°F and 60% glycol, the mixture can either crystallize like water (particularly when "seeded" by a crystal and agitated) or set to a glass-like solid with no orderly internal crystalline structure. Either way, the result is the same, and thawing measures including strong language are prescribed.
Anyway this is a question you can hit idiots with down at the pub
reet smartarses see who can search the net the fastest fer the answer to this one..
if a trains wheels are connected by a solid axle, in that if one wheel turns once then so must the other. how do they get around bends??
reet smartarses see who can search the net the fastest fer the answer to this one..
if a trains wheels are connected by a solid axle, in that if one wheel turns once then so must the other. how do they get around bends??
It can be 100% of the recommended mixture, or 500% or 740%, 912% 327%.Ok Ok I agree 100% is not a mixture. Mea Culpa etc. Anyway this is a question you can hit idiots with down at the pub