Flushing and refilling coolant

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Bob, Oct 31, 2006.

  1. Bob

    Bob Guest

    Question for Hyundaitech, or anyone else who knows the answer....

    How do you go about draining ALL of the coolant from an '06 Sonata? The
    owners manual and the online service manual say open the radiator drain, and
    let her rip. That gets you only a little over 2 quarts from a system that's
    supposed to be a little over 2 gallons. I wound up having to flush it
    multiple times with distilled water until no more green was left.



    The answer to the first question to me is: Because the jug that has blue
    liquid in it, and says "removes bugs" doesn't go in that hole. This was
    after I was told the windshield washer didn't work even though it's full.
    Who knows how much made it into the cooling system, or if it would hurt
    anything - Methanol and aluminum don't play nice together, and who knows
    what the elevated temps would do - but there's none in there now.
     
    Bob, Oct 31, 2006
    #1
  2. Bob

    hyundaitech Guest

    To my knowledge, Hyundai doesn't have any block drains. My only suggestion
    would be to pull the thermostat and install a garden hose. But it sounds
    like you've done an even better job than that.
     
    hyundaitech, Oct 31, 2006
    #2
  3. Bob

    misterh78 Guest

    why in the world would you flush coolant in a 2006 MY vehicle?
     
    misterh78, Nov 2, 2006
    #3
  4. If you read the entire post, you would have seen that he had an "ooops" when
    adding washer fluid.
     
    Edwin Pawlowski, Nov 2, 2006
    #4
  5. Bob

    Bob Guest

    Actually, I didn't have the "oops"... The washer was reported to be
    non-functional even though it was "filled" a few days prior. I tried
    flushing it according to the manual because several drive cycles occurred
    between the "filling", and I had no idea how much was sucked into the
    cooling system, and I have no desire to find out how well washer fluid mixes
    work in aluminum engines on a long term basis. The interesting discovery
    here is that the manuals are (both the owner's and the online service
    manual) are DEAD WRONG when it comes to the procedure for flushing the
    cooling system.

    Short of yanking the thermostat (as Hyundaitech suggested), and sucking out
    the contents of the cooling system , and heater core out with a wet-dry vac,
    the only way I could see to do it was to drain the radiator, and refill it
    with distilled water. I left the top hose off, kept the radiator full, and
    allowed water that made it through after the thermostat opened with the
    engine running and the heat on to drain into a clean garbage can. After no
    green was in the output water, I fed the system about a gallon and a 1/2 of
    new coolant. After a couple of days, I diluted the system down a little to
    get the mix to about 60% based on a hydrometer. After all the fun and games,
    I filled the water jugs, and the anti freeze bottle with the diluted former
    system contents. I've found that used auto parts yards take non-contaminated
    antifreeze for free. They sell it to recyclers. They didn't care that it was
    watered down.

    Hyundaitech.... Maybe you can bring it to someone's attention that the
    recommended procedure doesn't work. I can't imagine a pro going through all
    this trouble.
     
    Bob, Nov 3, 2006
    #5
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