Skip to main content

Is your coolant and cooling system ready for the Richmond summer ahead?

Richmond coolant check
There are warm, even hot days ahead. Is the
coolant in your cooling system up to the task?
Warm summer days are coming to Richmond, some of them even hot; while that’s a pleasant thing to think about, one question you should ask yourself is whether the coolant protecting your car’s engine is up to the task.

In 2024, there were 24 days through the summer in Richmond where the temperature topped 90 degrees, and 63 days in the 80s.* That’s 87 days where the coolant in your car’s engine better be up to the task. Keep in mind that, with operating temperatures, a car can actually overheat on a bitterly cold day in winter, if the coolant isn’t able to keep the engine cool.

And it’s not just the coolant; your vehicle depends on an entire cooling system to keep the engine from overheating.

Your car’s cooling system starts with hoses and passageways to move the coolant through the engine and a radiator, as well as a heater core in the dashboard. You have an upper radiator hose where the coolant is returned to the radiator and a lower radiator hose where the coolant moves into the engine.

The passageways within the engine allow the coolant to flow through the engine collecting heat along the way. When it has moved through the engine, it passes through a thermostat and back to the radiator. A water pump is responsible for keeping the coolant flowing, though the thermostat may close and stop the process until the coolant has reached operating temperature. 

The radiator has coils of tubes built inside thin metal fins. Behind the radiator is a fan that pulls air through the radiator so that the heat in the coolant is transferred away from the coolant. By this process, we could also refer to the upper radiator hose as the hot hose and the lower radiator hose as the cool hose.

Another part of the cooling system is the heater coil in the dashboard. This comes in handy mostly in the winter where a fan blows air over the heater coil so the heated coolant shares the heat with the passengers in the car.

Another important part of the cooling system is the pressure cap, otherwise known as the radiator cap. It is designed so that, if the vehicle is overheating, where overheated coolant will expand and create pressure, the cap will release that pressure before another part of the cooling system fails.

If all these parts are in good repair and operating as they should be, the only question is whether the coolant is up to the job.

Coolant is not just coolant. Over time, it will lose its capacity to do its job. When that happens, a hot Richmond day could find you on the side of the road with an overheated engine.

* From June 1 through September.


oil change Richmond


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Is your antifreeze safe from freezing this Richmond winter

You still have time to have it checked Well, there’s no denying it – winter tends to get chilly here in Richmond. We have to deal with snow and ice on the roads, scraping the same off our windows and windshield, and staying warm while we drive. Of course, you had your antifreeze checked before winter rolled into town. What?! You didn’t have your antifreeze checked before winter clamped down on Richmond? So, how’s your antifreeze doing?  If you haven’t had it checked, there’s really no way of knowing, is there? This car has overheated in the middle of a Richmond  winter. But, on the other end of the spectrum, the antifreeze can also freeze if it's not up to its job. Hopefully, you haven’t had a serious problem with your antifreeze already. If you did, you’d probably know. When antifreeze fails, it’s a potentially catastrophic condition for your vehicle’s engine. You could have hoses that have burst because of freezing antifreeze. Worse than that, your engine block may have crac...

Blocks of ice falling from cars in McHenry could cause accidents or damage

We’ve all seen those blocks of snow falling from behind the rear tires of a car when the snow rolls into McHenry . Fortunately, they’re just packed snow that will disintegrate under your vehicle’s tires as you simply drive right through them, right? Don’t count on it. Those blocks of snow are often packed so tight, condensed by the thaw-and-freeze cycle, that they’re anything but oversized snowballs . They’re often more like boulders.  Hit one of those blocks and the collision between the block and one of your tires could send you careening off the road or into oncoming traffic. In some cases, they’re so solid you could pound them with a sledgehammer with little effect. They truly can represent a serious road hazard. The problem is that it’s difficult to tell how solidly they’re packed when you see them on the road, left their unwittingly by another driver. Either way, your best bet is to try to avoid them. But you want to be careful dodging blocks of ice in the road, too. You need...

Get out to McHenry Music Festival for a good time and music near to home

Some folks here in McHenry will load up the car and head out to Red Rock Amphitheater near Denver to see a show. Some will go to the MSG Sphere near Las Vegas. Some will go to the Bonaroo Festival Concert to see a show. That’s quite a bit of driving and you’d better make sure your vehicle is up to the trip. What happens, however, if something goes wrong – if your vehicle breaks down while driving there or back? What happens if the show is canceled, as happened this year with the Bonaroo Festival? We’re talking about some serious inconvenience, aren’t we? Wherever you go, whether your driving to Colorado, Nevada, Tennessee or anywhere else in this continent, you want to perform your due diligence and make sure the vehicle is up for the trip before you go. And it doesn’t really matter if you’re driving somewhere to see some live music or for any other purpose. A breakdown can be costly and may put you at the mercy of weather conditions or nefarious characters that come across you while y...