After calculating lease payments for a new auto, and finally driving away in your new car, the temptation is to try out all its bells and whistles. The one to avoid is the radiator cap.because on modern cars the radiator hardly ever needs refilling. While the engine is still hot, the pressure in the radiator is greater than atmospheric, and loosening or unscrewing the cap will allow a burst of hot steam to flash in you face.
While your making lease payments on this highly dependable new car, many years ago on older cars, when there was no such thing as lease payments on a car, the engine water pumps ran full time pumping water through the engine block but not through the radiator. A spring-loaded valve was in the top of the engine, and when the temperature got to 180o, the spring would contract, and allow the water to be pumped though the radiator where the onrushing air due to the vehicles motion would cool the water and keep its temperature at 180o, below boiling point.
That means the coolant water in the radiator was not boiling, and it was safe to take off the cap. The radiator, vented to the atmosphere, was prevented from building up any internal pressure because no boiling took place.
Imagine this experiment Take a glass of boiling water and set it on the sink top when the house is at 70o temperature. Time how long it takes to cool down.
Now put the same glass of boiling water in the freezer and it will cool down much faster. Why?
Because the temperature difference was greater.
In thermodynamic language, the rate of cooling is directly proportional to the difference in the two temperatures.
Noting this phenomenon in Nature, automakers concluded that a much hotter radiator would get rid of heat faster and therefore could be made smaller and cost less to make. A smaller radiator would also reduce the cars front-end profile, making it more streamlined and esthetically pleasing.
To do so, it had to seal the radiatorwith a better cap.. and make a better radiator to hold a little pressure.
Modern engines and radiators Currently car radiators operate at about 210o to 220o, higher than boiling water temperature. This will work only as long as the radiator can hold higher than atmospheric pressure.
By making the radiator able to withstand higher pressures, the coolant can heat up to 220o and transfer heat faster and the radiator be smaller than Grampas 1945 Buick with its180o thermostat. An added bonus is that the hot water radiators, in the cabin of the car, used to heat the passengers, can also be smaller and cost less because they will be processing hotter water than Grampas 1945 Buick.
The radiator in a modern engine must be tightly sealed. If the cap on a hot modern radiator is removed, then all the water in the radiator, which is, for example, at 220o, above the 212o boiling point at sea level, would immediately turn to steam. But when water turns to steam it expands about 1,700 times, which means it will likely remove the hood of the car in one terrific explosion and scald the skin off the face or hands of the person who just unscrewed the cap.
If a hot water boiler in a basement of a house has a failed thermostat, and the water goes over 212o before the tank ruptures, the resulting expansion of 30 or 40 gallons of water into steam equal to 1,700 times the volume of the water will turn the house into a pile of twigs. And this does happen occasionally.
So, never, ever, remove the cap on a hot radiator in a modern car. And always keep the makeup reservoir, usually mounted under the hood against one of the fenders, at least half full.
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