In my quest for excitement, I spent one hour in a frenzy of speed-reading and can say unreservedly with the awesome power of the WWW and MOTOBRICK.COM archives behind me, that there are three coolant objectives for the Brick owner.
1. Use
long life coolant—a distinct coolant formula—that is
without nitrites (nitrides). According to a BMW service bulletin in our archives, nitrites will discolor the coolant level tube to a degree that will mask the coolant level. That will impede checking for a proper coolant level.
2. Maintain the
recommended coolant level. When the level lowers, it may allow the formation of coolant and water vapors that are corrosive and
that may promote seal damage and sediment formation. DexCool was involved in defending itself in a class action lawsuit several years ago. In those days, apparently, when DexCool levels dropped, the vapors were alleged by its dissatisfied users' lawyer brigade to be particularly corrosive causing wailing, moaning, gnashing of teeth, hand wringing and end-of-the-world consequences to engines and the bank accounts of their users. Payouts were made.
3. Expect optimal results by using a single brand and type of coolant. Coolant provides pump/seal lubrication, coolant channel preservation, freeze protection and overheating protection. When different brands of coolants are mixed to an extent approaching 50% or less of their original concentrations, a subsequent loss of their protective qualities may result.
BMW recommends the use of BMW coolant or
other brands of
long life coolant that are
free of nitrites. That's the extent of BMW's recommendation in my K's riders manual. Coolant degrades and evaporates. Long life coolants are probably recommended because they maintain their properties well. The two year replacement cycle makes sense; the maintenance of recommended coolant level seems essential to resist degradation of parts, gnashing of teeth and the rest of it. Believe it or not.
So much for my excitement—until the premiere of gone_ape's sequel,
Return of the Throttle Blipper.
Running too cool can reduce performance some . . . Keeping a consistent operating temp will keep every component in tolerance and perform as it was designed to.
+1