Has anyone tried one of these or the home-brewed equivalent?
0
No explanation what 260=B0F means. Is that 260 Fahrenheit? I am boiling away, but the solution is only getting up to 220 Fahrenheit. The fumes coming off are leaving an oily deposit on everything, which tells me I'm only boiling away the glycol, not water. Pretty useless formula. -- For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...nt-454053-.htm |
Has anyone tried one of these or the home-brewed equivalent?
On 3/25/2021 8:01 PM, kenny wrote:
0 No explanation what 260=B0F means. Is that 260 Fahrenheit? I am boiling away, but the solution is only getting up to 220 Fahrenheit. The fumes coming off are leaving an oily deposit on everything, which tells me I'm only boiling away the glycol, not water. Pretty useless formula. Boiling point of glycol is 386.6F or 197C degrees. |
Has anyone tried one of these or the home-brewed equivalent?
On 03/25/2021 06:01 PM, kenny wrote:
No explanation what 260=B0F means. Is that 260 Fahrenheit? I am boiling away, but the solution is only getting up to 220 Fahrenheit. The fumes coming off are leaving an oily deposit on everything, which tells me I'm only boiling away the glycol, not water. Pretty useless formula. https://www.utf8-chartable.de/ U+00B0 is the UTF-8 encoding for the degree symbol. Somewhere along the way some program did not like the symbol and substituted the encoding. So it was originally 260 degreeSymbol F |
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