nssj
+1y
COOLANT:
(and again, this is all my research and my opinion, you dont have to do what i did, im just seeing how it works out for me)
1 gallon PEAK long life concentrated coolant
1 gallon distilled water
1 bottle of radiator flush
B2200 cooling system is 7.9qts with heater core hooked up
I asked on here and mazdatruckin, and got similar answers. 50/50 mix of whatever... that may work fine.
BUT
Knowing our trucks are prone to headgasket and overheating issues, I didn't want to take a chance on something i wasnt sure would work good.
I googled mazda coolant, and found some more articles on various sites. the mazda3 guys seemed extremely OCD about which coolant they would use. maybe minitruckers are more laid back than rice jockeys. either way, for under $20, Id rather know for a fact what I'm doing works, than leave a head up to chance that it might work.
The Mazda 3 guys found 2 options for mazda coolant:
Mazda FL-22 coolant pn: 0000-77-508E-20 "extended life"
or pn: 0000-77-501E-02 "long life"
from mazda dealership
FL-22, as in diluted version, is identical to
Motorcraft Specialty Green, Ford part number VC-10-A. (50/50)
Motorcraft Specialty Green, Ford part number VC-10-A2.(concentrated)
from ford dealership
those being the best 2 options for newer mazdas which are apparently more sensitive than older vehicles...
"The green in most Japanese cars contains no silicates, so it's not the same as the green in the parts store."
"Using conventional North American green coolant in a Mazda is a bad idea. Even German (BASF) coolant technology as embodied in G-05, which contains silicates and no phosphates, is a much better choice than conventional North American green for vehicles with aluminum blocks and aluminum radiators. But a genuine P-OAT coolant, particularly a second generation P-OAT coolant like Mazda FL22 or Motorcraft Specialty Green, is the best choice."
older mazda, and most japanese cars need a "silicate free coolant"
most silicate free coolants just happen to be green, but color doesnt make it right.
"The only aftermarket P-OAT coolants are Japanese OEM coolants from Mazda, Toyota, Honda, and Nissan, Zerex Asian Vehicle coolant, PEAK longlife, Peak global lifetime and Motorcraft Specialty Green Engine Coolant"
(there may be other silicate free coolants that work, this is just the list i found so far)
all coolants have ASTM standards on the bottle:
if you are bored enough to look there, you will find what a specific standard means. some of the ones on the bottle i got were detailing the following
silicate free coolants are designed for mixed iron and aluminum engines. a silicate coolant supposedly doesnt provice enough protection for aluminum parts.
other standards were for things like water pump lubricant. so some coolants apparently keep our water pumps spinning free, while others meant for og v8 timing chain cars wont provide this lubrication...
drained radiator. filled with prestone radiator flush and water.
followed instructions on the bottle, ran it, rinsed it, ran it, rinsed it...
actually rinsed the cooling system til nothing but clear water came out
(something ive never botherd to do before)
washed out overflow tank.
filled engine and overflow bottles with coolant. used gallon up. added distlled water on top of both to finish filling (7.9qts total)
ass down, nose up on juice got radiator cap as the highest point. if your suspension doesnt move, park on a hill, or read alternate bleeding places on this site...
bled all air out. put on cap, op ck good.
I chose parts that stated they worked within factory spec. and i even used distilled water. this may all be overkill, but if it prevents me doing head work later, Ill be happy i took the time...