Can I run with water only in my radiator all the time?

2crazy2stop

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 28, 2011
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Buffalo
Visit site
I will be doing my 1st track day with my fz6 and the track requires water only in the radiator. My question is, can I just run water all of the time, or do I need to switch back and forth between water and anti-freeze?

I asked about Water Wetter, and they said no, water only.

Thanks.
 

skooter65

Mainah'
Elite Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2008
Messages
1,640
Reaction score
44
Points
0
Location
Gorham, Maine
Visit site
This is a two part no:

First; Running water only loses the " anti" part of the anti-freeze. Given that you live in the north east; there are bound to be times of temperatures below freezing.

Second; There are a number of additives in anti freeze that stop corrosion within the components of the cooling system. Again, lost with running water only.
 

CBRF3RIDER

Junior Member
Joined
Jun 30, 2011
Messages
388
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
East Lansing, MI
Visit site
This is a two part no:

First; Running water only loses the " anti" part of the anti-freeze. Given that you live in the north east; there are bound to be times of temperatures below freezing.

Even if the temperature is above freezing the windchill can still freeze the water. There was a guy over on the CBR forum that was running water in the spring and cracked his engine block from it freezing!
 

dxh24

Ambitious But Rubbish
Joined
Mar 28, 2011
Messages
1,329
Reaction score
10
Points
0
Location
Rochester, NY
Visit site
Agreed, if the air is below 32 you no longer have a functioning radiator. I've seen one that actually blew the top off of it when it became ice and distorted the whole radiator. Wouldn't recommend it in the winter, and as for summer, there's a reason they use coolant not water when they sell you a bike. Water is a good temporary substitute but not a permanent option :(

So yeah, unfortunately for your track day you'll have to drain whats in it, switch to water, then when it's over, within a reasonable amount of time, i'd drain the water and get coolant back in it... I believe they want water in it because water will evaporate if you wreck, whereas Antifreeze/coolant will pose a serious slip hazard to everyone else on the track (i think anyhow, never been to a track day that wasn't offroad.....yet :D )
 
Last edited:

2crazy2stop

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 28, 2011
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Buffalo
Visit site
This is a two part no:

First; Running water only loses the " anti" part of the anti-freeze. Given that you live in the north east; there are bound to be times of temperatures below freezing.

Second; There are a number of additives in anti freeze that stop corrosion within the components of the cooling system. Again, lost with running water only.


Thanks, that is what I was thinking.

I wasn't to worried about the 1st part because she lives inside during the winter and I am baby when it comes to riding in the cold :)

for the 2nd "no", lets say I was doing a track day, then another one two weeks later. Lets say that I would ride 50 miles 10 times between the two dates...would you change from water back to anti-freeze and back again to water during those two weeks? Basically am I going to be changing back and forth every time I go to the track?

Thanks

John
 

dxh24

Ambitious But Rubbish
Joined
Mar 28, 2011
Messages
1,329
Reaction score
10
Points
0
Location
Rochester, NY
Visit site
With most vehicles, water in the radiator is fine for a few weeks, Ca't really say for motorcycles though (again other than off road)... Dirtbikes i know can run off water for all summer, although watch the temps...Motorcycles tend to build heat faster due to low tolerances and high rpms... So if you do keep water in it, keep an eye on your temp... with liquid cooled engines the cylinders are built with a much finer tolerance than air cooled, because the inner paerts will expand less because they are kept cool. so overheating will do damage quicker to a liquid cooled engine.

Just my .02, Have fun on your track day, have somebody take some pics :thumbup:
 

Randomchaos

Flaming Hot Doughnut
Elite Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2011
Messages
595
Reaction score
9
Points
0
Location
Maynardville, TN
Visit site
Ah this reminds me of a story a friend once told me. A friend of his ended up buying a nice Speed Triple one summer. When winter came, he stored it in his garage. Spring time rolls around, he goes to get it out of the garage, only to find the engine cracked. Turns out the previous owner had switched to water for some track stuff, and had not told him.

I would just change it out for the trackday as track prep work, and change it back when you get home. Its real simple on these bikes.
 

VEGASRIDER

100K Mile Member
Elite Member
Site Supporter
Joined
May 5, 2007
Messages
6,495
Reaction score
127
Points
63
Location
RENO, NEVADA USA
Visit site
It's best to use distlled water, keeping the mineral deposits to a mimium. You can get get it in one gallon containers at any grocery store.

Winter, you should use anti-freeze for obvious reasons.
 

DefyInertia

Former '04 FZ6 Rider
Joined
Aug 14, 2007
Messages
3,701
Reaction score
66
Points
0
Location
San Francisco, CA
Visit site
It's best to use distlled water, keeping the mineral deposits to a mimium. You can get get it in one gallon containers at any grocery store.

Winter, you should use anti-freeze for obvious reasons.

THIS

You can leave the distilled water in there until the temps start dropping later in the year. That is BS that they won't allow water wetter.
 

2crazy2stop

Junior Member
Joined
Jul 28, 2011
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Buffalo
Visit site
THIS

You can leave the distilled water in there until the temps start dropping later in the year. That is BS that they won't allow water wetter.

There exact response was this:
No....it is as bad, maybe even worse than anti-freeze to get off the track.....I don't know that it's ever been discussed, nor have I heard of anyone using it before, but I had a car fire on a private street rental years ago, and the real county fire trucks had to put it out, we were not even there, they were not racing, just doing a photo shoot or something, and one car had an electrical fire...track was ruined for racing that night because they used the wetter.....and soaked down a huge area.
 

Marthy

Junior Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2011
Messages
709
Reaction score
10
Points
18
Location
West Palm Beach, FL
Visit site
Thanks, that is what I was thinking.

I wasn't to worried about the 1st part because she lives inside during the winter and I am baby when it comes to riding in the cold :)

for the 2nd "no", lets say I was doing a track day, then another one two weeks later. Lets say that I would ride 50 miles 10 times between the two dates...would you change from water back to anti-freeze and back again to water during those two weeks? Basically am I going to be changing back and forth every time I go to the track?

Thanks

John

For track day use Water Weather (The pink stuff) Just make sure you change the fluid before it get too cold. You need some sort of additive to that lubricate the water pump... and raise the boiling pts. plain water is not recommended, distilled water of course.
 
Last edited:

DownrangeFuture

Electronic Repair Genius
Joined
Dec 22, 2010
Messages
958
Reaction score
12
Points
0
Location
Houston, TX
Visit site
Water wetter is basically just distilled water with some of the anti-corrosives in it with something to lower the freeze temp.

He wasn't even there. Who knows? It's probably from the AFFF they used to put out the fire. That's basically soap, so I can see that messing up a large portion of the track. And county fire trucks don't normally carry PKP or something that wouldn't kill the track.

Got to love retarded people.
 

Marthy

Junior Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2011
Messages
709
Reaction score
10
Points
18
Location
West Palm Beach, FL
Visit site
Water Weather is sold by about every part peddler at any race track. If it's good for about 95% of racecar I worked on in the past 10-15 years, it should be good enough for a bike. Mixed to the right ratio (before it goes in the rad) it's good stuff. It bring the boiling pts just a little higher, keep everything from rusting... At the end of the day, that's what it was made for... replacing Prestone for racing, so it don't grease up the track.

If the F.D. got the track wet anyway, all the oil will get out too. You should see when it start raining... the first few minutes you can see the oil floating on top of the water.
 

Robmac

Junior Member
Joined
Feb 8, 2009
Messages
35
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Canada
Visit site
I know many people that race their bikes of the weekend and tracks do not permit the use of antifreeze, only water. After track day they swap out the water for antifreeze for better protection etc.

Also, a note on a earlier post regarding windchill: If the air temp is above freezing (0c / 32f) then no amount of windchill can bring the temp of the water in your rad/engine below that temp. The "Windchill" effect simply removes heat faster and makes it seem (to us warm blooded animals) that it is actually colder then it really is.
 
Last edited:

FinalImpact

2 Da Street, Knobs R Gone
Site Supporter
Joined
Mar 16, 2011
Messages
11,137
Reaction score
184
Points
63
Location
USA, OR
Visit site
.... You need some sort of additive to that lubricate the water pump... and raise the boiling pts. plain water is not recommended, distilled water of course.


More specifically the seal in the water pump needs lubricant so the spinning shaft doesn't harden it. Without some form of lube the seal becomes hard and leaks water into the water pumps bearings and the pump fails.

Think of your elbow across the gym floor at 14,000 RPM :eek:
 

FinalImpact

2 Da Street, Knobs R Gone
Site Supporter
Joined
Mar 16, 2011
Messages
11,137
Reaction score
184
Points
63
Location
USA, OR
Visit site
Some facts about Water Wetter. . .
It seems when mixed with water it reduces the surface tension of the water at a molecular level. Meaning: A large molecule of water turns to steam at lower temperature than a small one. So it does effectively raise the boiling point higher than water itself and 50/50 mix water/glycol. Who knew!!!


This is worth a read folks. . . But it says the sight is moving so the link may not last too much longer. 2011-08-15
WaterWetter® Tech Info
 

Shiny_side_up

Junior Member
Joined
May 23, 2010
Messages
108
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Dublin, Ca
Visit site
Yup, WaterWetter is a surfactant - you effectively get more "contact" between your coolant and the surface you're cooling. I ran a 600hp Mustang (blown 331) with a stock radiator and under driven water pump in Northern California year round with distilled water, WaterWetter and a synthetic waterpump lubricant. 192^ thermostat and no problems with overheating. I wasn't able to do that with anti-freeze in there (water transfers heat much better than anti-freeze). Since the car never saw really cold weather - it was viable.

That's interesting that a bike froze up on the track from wind chill - you'd think that 600-1000cc heater would keep the water warm and flowing...

But yeah, I'll agree with most here that you can get away with straight water, but make sure you go back to the real stuff right afterwards or your internals could suffer.
 

fastar1

Junior Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2009
Messages
114
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Canada
Visit site
I will be doing my 1st track day with my fz6 and the track requires water only in the radiator. My question is, can I just run water all of the time, or do I need to switch back and forth between water and anti-freeze?

I asked about Water Wetter, and they said no, water only.

Thanks.

I would get a second opinion on the "no water wetter' rule. Ask someone else who's part of the organisaion, it doesn't make sense.

If you really have to run water alone, use distilled water to reduce the buildup of deposits in the cooling system. Then change it back to coolant with antifreeze or water wetter when you can. They both provide improved cooling ability and protection for the cooling system.

And BTW wind chill will NOT reduce the temperature below ambient, so if you don't come close to freezing temps then water wetter is the best option (less environmentaly hazardous).
 

FZ6_Dude

FZ6 Corner Carver
Joined
Jun 10, 2011
Messages
126
Reaction score
2
Points
0
Location
Nashville, TN
Visit site
+1 water wetter will not be any harm to the track if you have a spill... i would recommend you go ahead and use it anyways and just not mention it to anyone that told you not to use it... ive had water wetter in my bike for over 15k miles and no ill effects and ive done atleast 2-5 trackdays a year since '06... its cheap to pick up a bottle and they wont be openning up your radiator cap to check anyway... the person that answered no on water wetter and said its worse than a glycol based antifreeze is a moron...
 

Marthy

Junior Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2011
Messages
709
Reaction score
10
Points
18
Location
West Palm Beach, FL
Visit site
+1 water wetter will not be any harm to the track if you have a spill... i would recommend you go ahead and use it anyways and just not mention it to anyone that told you not to use it... ive had water wetter in my bike for over 15k miles and no ill effects and ive done atleast 2-5 trackdays a year since '06... its cheap to pick up a bottle and they wont be openning up your radiator cap to check anyway... the person that answered no on water wetter and said its worse than a glycol based antifreeze is a moron...

LOL You have no idea how many of those "Race Fan" that end up in those little local race track club. 1. They don't race 2. They don't even work on bike 3. They probably even don't own a motorcycle 4. I'll bet $100 he doesn't know the difference between pink coolaid, W/W or regular coolant. Well, maybe someone told him green is no go... :spank:

W/W has been around for quite some time. It's proven! It work! Not much more to say about it!

Here's another link... http://www.redlineoil.com/product.aspx?pid=74&pcid=10
 
Last edited:
Top