I have a 1995 Chevy 1/2 ton that my son and I picked up cheap knowing it had overheated and needed some work. It had blown a head gasket and the cooling system was contaminated with oily residue and combustion gases. We had the heads done and while apart I tried to flush and clean the heater core, the radiator, and the somewhat the block even thought the short block stayed together. Unfortunately the heads took longer that expected and I am sure I ended up with some rusting inside the block as it sat partially filled and open for almost 3 months.
After getting everything up and running I ran a blue devil flush to try and get the rest of the oil and any rust or buildup out of the system and got it to a point where the water running out seemed to be clear with no oily film and inside the radiator looked clean. Here is the big question, 1995 was a transition year between green and dexcool coolant. While the owners manual states to use green, the underhood sticker says Dexcool. I have no idea what was in it previously as it was a complete mess, but I almost feel like it at least had some of the old green in it because the intake was stained but it also had orange muddy look to it. Considering its pretty old school iron block and heads but with aluminum radiator what would be the best option, with the caveat that it may not get driven that much in the coming year as it still needs other work... if that matters.
option 1, refill with Dexcool as stated on the sticker just to be 'correct' to the truck. Considering the flush water is clear would this cause any issue even if there is rust inside the block that the flush may not have completely cleaned up? Or since its been contaminated at some point will I see problems with Dexcool in this situation? I have dexcool in other vehicles and haven't really had problems except late 90's intake gaskets but I haven't had one thie messed up and neglected before.
option 2, fill with conventional green. Would this be safer if there is left over rust or particulate in the block? I'm sure in 1995 GM didn't suddenly change production of the engines and just switched coolant types so this is probably ok even with the aluminum radiator. I guess I could pull the sticker off the underhood and noone would be the wiser.
option 3, fill with Prestone or similar AMAM. I'm not really sure what to expect with these as I have always run the specific manufacturer coolants.
After getting everything up and running I ran a blue devil flush to try and get the rest of the oil and any rust or buildup out of the system and got it to a point where the water running out seemed to be clear with no oily film and inside the radiator looked clean. Here is the big question, 1995 was a transition year between green and dexcool coolant. While the owners manual states to use green, the underhood sticker says Dexcool. I have no idea what was in it previously as it was a complete mess, but I almost feel like it at least had some of the old green in it because the intake was stained but it also had orange muddy look to it. Considering its pretty old school iron block and heads but with aluminum radiator what would be the best option, with the caveat that it may not get driven that much in the coming year as it still needs other work... if that matters.
option 1, refill with Dexcool as stated on the sticker just to be 'correct' to the truck. Considering the flush water is clear would this cause any issue even if there is rust inside the block that the flush may not have completely cleaned up? Or since its been contaminated at some point will I see problems with Dexcool in this situation? I have dexcool in other vehicles and haven't really had problems except late 90's intake gaskets but I haven't had one thie messed up and neglected before.
option 2, fill with conventional green. Would this be safer if there is left over rust or particulate in the block? I'm sure in 1995 GM didn't suddenly change production of the engines and just switched coolant types so this is probably ok even with the aluminum radiator. I guess I could pull the sticker off the underhood and noone would be the wiser.
option 3, fill with Prestone or similar AMAM. I'm not really sure what to expect with these as I have always run the specific manufacturer coolants.