Coolant Bleeder Screw

puzzled

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Looks like someone was busy playing with the internets.
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zrk

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I will monitor it at service intervals and let you know in 10 years if I notice any galvanic corrosion.

-RJM
Dudes.. If y'all are having electricity in your coolant, you've got problems bigger than corrosion.

But yeah, @Loco38SUP could you let me know how that is after 10 years? Just PM me here. I don't change email addresses very often.
 

METAL

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How much coolant should be pouring out when I unscrew the oem screw?
 
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Loco38SUP

Loco38SUP

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How much coolant should be pouring out when I unscrew the oem screw?
None if your car is cold. Some could spill out if the car is hot and your system is pressurized.

-RJM
 

METAL

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None if your car is cold. Some could spill out if the car is hot and your system is pressurized.

-RJM
Explains it. I shall try again in the morning.
 

digicidal

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I will monitor it at service intervals and let you know in 10 years if I notice any galvanic corrosion.
-RJM
Considering titanium is very noble (maybe even a ducal lord... ehm sorry ;) ) you shouldn't have any concerns about galvanic corrosion. If any did occur, it wouldn't be the screw... or for that matter the brass bung either... you've got aluminum in your cooling path... that's what would act as the anode.

However, unless you're running salt water with no coolant whatsoever - you've already got corrosion inhibitors involved and a relatively non-conductive fluid. I'm guessing dropping a zinc pellet in your cooling line as a sacrificial anode would be much more destructive. :p

I'm with @zrk - if it becomes a problem... then you've got much bigger issues than a bit of corrosion at your bleeder screw.
 
 




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