deionization is the same as demineralised water, same process, passing water through filters to remove minerals, where as distilled water is capturing boiled water.
You are correct, that is the process of producing distilled water. Although distilled water can still rust the radiator because, the distilled water now has no “ions”. So now the water becomes ion hungry, as in it can strip the electrons from the internal metals in the cooling system. The water wants to re chemical itself, so now the distilled water can become acidic. It’s best to use demineralised water or soft water. Thanks for watching.
From what I've heard in my lab, distilled water should be safe for this sort of thing, but deionized water causes things to rust more quickly. That water company was doing some false advertising
deionization is the same as demineralised water, same process, passing water through filters to remove minerals, where as distilled water is capturing boiled water.
I believe you got it wrong. Distilled water also has no minerals and it’s produced by capturing water vapors from boiling water leaving a pure water
You are correct, that is the process of producing distilled water. Although distilled water can still rust the radiator because, the distilled water now has no “ions”. So now the water becomes ion hungry, as in it can strip the electrons from the internal metals in the cooling system.
The water wants to re chemical itself, so now the distilled water can become acidic.
It’s best to use demineralised water or soft water.
Thanks for watching.
From what I've heard in my lab, distilled water should be safe for this sort of thing, but deionized water causes things to rust more quickly. That water company was doing some false advertising
1 cdn gallon ( 4.4 L ) demineralized water at 1.25 $ cdn no tax : at drugstore or grocery store
I think one should mix distilled water with coolant
Or wouldn't homebrand $2 from the shops do the same
@@judemorrison2701 no that’s distilled water.