I dunno man i read that statement a few times and haven't come up with a conclusion. You are the first to ever tell me that coolant doesn't burn. I know coolant has a lifted boiling point, but if combustion temps reach say 1600º F and said coolant is entering that flame front i would imagine it getting burned, it getting pushed out the exhaust valve(s) and it venting a white cloud of sweet smelling smoke(steam?) to the atmosphere.
Not flaming you at all, would just like to know your side of this!
Sorry for hijacking thread
It's coolant... What is coolant's purpose? To cool the engine. If a normal combustion chamber, gets to 1600*, then how hot would a cylinder get, with a wet spark plug, and coolant on the piston, and cylinder wall? A wet spark plug doesn't spark, at least not very well. No fire = no heat = much lower combustion chamber temp. Each spark would burn off a tiny, and I mean TINY bit of coolant. By the time you burned off any significant amount of coolant, you would have typically caused some engine damage.
The sweet smelling steam is a result of the silicates from the coolant breaking down, over time, and mixing with water. Kinda like when you boil something, after a while, you can smell w/e is in the water. Water in the combustion chamber is turned to steam, and carries the silicates with it, which creates the smell.
My dad was a mechanic for 32 years, so while I'm no expert, I don't just talk out of my *** either. I changed my first set of brake pads when I was 4, and I did it without removing the caliper from the mounting bracket, and I've been up to my elbows in grease ever since.