Water/Methanol - Does it go bad?

Red Snake

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I have a Roe w/m kit installed. I have a large plastic tank installed and I don't drive my car very much. If the w/m tank sits all winter will the methanol evaporate and leave my mixture "weaker" or will the mixture be just as good next spring as it was this summer? :eater:
 

Tom F&L GoR

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Yes, it is true that the methanol (which has a lower boiling point and a lower latent heat of vaporization) will be "lost" more quickly. In fact, it was of such interest to some grad students, they studied the evaporation rate of various water-ethanol mixtures. A 50-50 mix became a 71-29 mix after sitting out for a week. Keep a lid on the container and you can judge the effect by watching the container level.


Bayblab: Evaporation Rates of Ethanol Solutions
Fluids - Latent Heat of Evaporation
 

Tom F&L GoR

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Yes, it is true that the methanol (which has a lower boiling point and a lower latent heat of vaporization) will be "lost" more quickly. In fact, it was of such interest to some grad students, they studied the evaporation rate of various water-ethanol mixtures. A 50-50 mix became a 71-29 mix after sitting out for a week. Keep a lid on the container and you can judge the effect by watching the container level.


Bayblab: Evaporation Rates of Ethanol Solutions
Fluids - Latent Heat of Evaporation



This seems like a good candidate for the "Questions" series.
 
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Red Snake

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Thanks for the info Tom. Looks like I'll drain and refill before I get the car out for the spring. :2tu:


If there were data regarding the evaporation rate in a covered container I might be able to recalculate a "recharge" rate and just add some methanol to the mix. This test involved an open container so it's not quite the same circumstance.
 
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99 R/T 10

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Yes, it is true that the methanol (which has a lower boiling point and a lower latent heat of vaporization) will be "lost" more quickly. In fact, it was of such interest to some grad students, they studied the evaporation rate of various water-ethanol mixtures. A 50-50 mix became a 71-29 mix after sitting out for a week. Keep a lid on the container and you can judge the effect by watching the container level.


Bayblab: Evaporation Rates of Ethanol Solutions
Fluids - Latent Heat of Evaporation


The tank does have a lid on it. That being said, it should keep the mix close to 50/50(or what ever you want), correct? If you want to add insurance, just add a bottle of HEET(yellow bottle). 99.99 ****.
 

Madduc

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But there is a small vent in the cap. So I wonder how much that would let the mix to evaporate? I drain the mix out when i put my car away for winter. Then I disconnect the lines from the nozzles and run some RV antifreeze thru it. Then in the spring put in a fresh batch.
 

Tom F&L GoR

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Don't forget the student's test was with ethanol, not methanol. Methanol would evaporate more quickly. My $0.02 would be to note the fluid level in the closed, vented container, put a paperclip or pencil in the vent, and note the fluid level. Then assume whatever evaporated was the methanol and add back later. (99 RT/10 method.)

Methanol doesn't freeze until about -140F so I don't think flushing with RV antifreeze would be needed.
 
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Red Snake

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Don't forget the student's test was with ethanol, not methanol. Methanol would evaporate more quickly. My $0.02 would be to note the fluid level in the closed, vented container, put a paperclip or pencil in the vent, and note the fluid level. Then assume whatever evaporated was the methanol and add back later. (99 RT/10 method.)

Methanol doesn't freeze until about -140F so I don't think flushing with RV antifreeze would be needed.

Good idea. :2tu:
 

Madduc

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I use the RV antifreeze to flush out the pump mainly. Isn't the methonal ******* the pumps seals over time? Or could enough of it evaporate over the winter and leave a weak enough mix of water to then freeze in the pump or lines?
 

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