Prestone European Vehicles (Teal) 50/50 Antifreeze / Coolant – Gallon

Top-off your European car’s cooling system with a mix off Prestone 50/50 Antifreeze/Coolant mainly formulated on your European automobile. Prestone’s advanced extended lifestyles antifreeze capabilities an more advantageous inhibitor package deal that stops corrosion and helps engines run longer. Prestone 50/50 for European cars is a blend of focused antifreeze/coolant and demineralized water mainly designed and synthetic to be like minded together with your European automobile. Prestone 50/50 Prediluted Antifreeze/Coolant for European motors is well matched with ANY antifreeze/coolant, regardless of colour, and can be utilized in ALL makes and models of vehicles and mild responsibility vehicles.

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Prestone European Vehicles (Teal) 50/50 Antifreeze / Coolant – Gallon
Top-off a vehicle’s cooling machine with Prestone 50/50 for European vehiclesPrestone’s improved extended lifestyles antifreeze functions an stronger inhibitor bundle that forestalls corrosion and allows engines run longerPrestone 50/50 for European vehicles is a blend of focused antifreeze/coolant and demineralized waterPrestone 50/50 Prediluted Antifreeze/Coolant for European cars is well matched with ANY antifreeze/coolant, no matter coloration, and can be utilized in ALL makes and fashions of automobiles and mild obligation vans

50 may refer to:

  • 50 (number)
  • one of the following years 50 BC, AD 50, 1950, 2050
  • .50 BMG, a heavy machine gun cartridge also used in sniper rifles
  • .50 Action Express, a large pistol cartridge commonly used in the Desert Eagle
  • .50 GI, a wildcat pistol cartridge
  • .50 Beowulf, a powerful rifle cartridge used in the AR-15 platform
  • .50 Alaskan, a wildcat rifle cartridge
  • 50 Cent, an American rapper
  • Labatt 50, a Canadian beer
  • Fifty (film), a 2015 film
  • "The Fifty", a group of fifty airmen murdered by the Gestapo after The Great Escape in World War II
  • 50 (Rick Astley album), 2016
  • 50 (Chris de Burgh album), 2024
  • Benjamin Yeaten, widely known by his radio call sign "50", a Liberian military and mercenary leader
  • "Fifty", a song by Karma to Burn from the album V, 2011
  • 50 Virginia, a main-belt asteroid
  • Audi 50, a supermini hatchback
  • Dodge Ram 50, a compact pickup truck sold in the United States as a rebadged Mitsubishi Triton

An antifreeze is an additive which lowers the freezing point of a water-based liquid. An antifreeze mixture is used to achieve freezing-point depression for cold environments. Common antifreezes also increase the boiling point of the liquid, allowing higher coolant temperature. However, all common antifreeze additives also have lower heat capacities than water, and do reduce water's ability to act as a coolant when added to it.

Because water has good properties as a coolant, water plus antifreeze is used in internal combustion engines and other heat transfer applications, such as HVAC chillers and solar water heaters. The purpose of antifreeze is to prevent a rigid enclosure from bursting due to expansion when water freezes. Commercially, both the additive (pure concentrate) and the mixture (diluted solution) are called antifreeze, depending on the context. Careful selection of an antifreeze can enable a wide temperature range in which the mixture remains in the liquid phase, which is critical to efficient heat transfer and the proper functioning of heat exchangers. Most if not all commercial antifreeze formulations intended for use in heat transfer applications include anti-corrosion and anti-cavitation agents (that protect the hydraulic circuit from progressive wear).

A coolant is a substance, typically liquid, that is used to reduce or regulate the temperature of a system. An ideal coolant has high thermal capacity, low viscosity, is low-cost, non-toxic, chemically inert and neither causes nor promotes corrosion of the cooling system. Some applications also require the coolant to be an electrical insulator.

While the term "coolant" is commonly used in automotive and HVAC applications, in industrial processing heat-transfer fluid is one technical term more often used in high temperature as well as low-temperature manufacturing applications. The term also covers cutting fluids. Industrial cutting fluid has broadly been classified as water-soluble coolant and neat cutting fluid. Water-soluble coolant is oil in water emulsion. It has varying oil content from nil oil (synthetic coolant).

This coolant can either keep its phase and stay liquid or gaseous, or can undergo a phase transition, with the latent heat adding to the cooling efficiency. The latter, when used to achieve below-ambient temperature, is more commonly known as refrigerant.

The gallon is a unit of volume in British imperial units and United States customary units. Three different versions are in current use:

  • the imperial gallon (imp gal), defined as 4.54609 litres, which is or was used in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and some Caribbean countries;
  • the US liquid gallon (US gal), defined as 231 cubic inches (exactly 3.785411784 L), which is used in the United States and some Latin American and Caribbean countries; and
  • the US dry gallon, defined as 18 US bushel (exactly 4.40488377086 L).

There are two pints in a quart and four quarts in a gallon. Different sizes of pints account for the different sizes of the imperial and US gallons.

The IEEE standard symbol for both US (liquid) and imperial gallon is gal, not to be confused with the gal (symbol: Gal), a CGS unit of acceleration.

Teal is a greenish-blue color. Its name comes from that of a bird—the Eurasian teal (Anas crecca)—which presents a similarly colored stripe on its head. The word is often used colloquially to refer to shades of cyan in general.

It can be created by mixing cyan into a green base, or deepened as needed with black or gray. It is also one of the first group of 16 HTML/CSS web colors. In the RGB model used to create colors on computer screens and televisions, teal is created by reducing the brightness of cyan to about one half.

In North America, teal was a fad color during the 1990s, with, among others, many sports teams adopting the color for their uniforms.

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