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Cooling System Antifreeze Requirements Denver CO

The aftermarket has always had a knack for simplifying things the OEMs have complicated, and coolants are no exception. Coolant suppliers who have tried to meet the conflicting OEM coolant requirements now market three basics types of coolant: the traditional green formula, plus an orange formula that meets GM’s Dex-Cool 6277 specification, and a yellow hybrid (HOAT) formula for Ford, Chrysler and all the rest.

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Cooling System Antifreeze Requirements

By Larry Carley  
October 01, 2008

When a customer brings you a vehicle that needs a coolant change, what kind of coolant should you use? The type of coolant specified by the vehicle manufacturer? A universal or “all makes, all models” type of coolant? Or should you run the old coolant through a recycling machine and put it back in the system? All are valid options for servicing today’s vehicles, but the options are not without controversy.

Before Dex-Cool was introduced back in 1995, almost every domestically produced vehicle used a traditional “green” formula inorganic acid technology (IAT) coolant. The Japanese and European automakers had their own versions of this formula. But as far as the aftermarket was concerned, the same stuff worked just fine no matter what you poured it into. So in that respect, green coolant was essentially a universal all makes, all models type of coolant for its day.

Then things got complicated. GM specified its orange-colored Dex-Cool coolant, which used a totally different kind of additive package based on organic acid technology (OAT). Ford and Chrysler opted for a hybrid version (HOAT) formula that added silicates to increase aluminum protection. The Japanese and Europeans both developed their own OAT formulas, with the Japanese adding phosphates while the Europeans took out phosphates. Everybody decided to dye their coolants a different color, which only added to the confusio...

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