Rads of yore were entirely made of brass but 35 years ago there was a factory movement afoot (at the time attributed to cost and convenience) towards plastic tanks with aluminum fins. None of this made any sense to me (Al and vehicle Fe don't get along at all and Al is a 'sacrificial sheep' (anode)) in the 'salt belt' but here we are 35 years later and the 'cheezy new-fangled' rads have actually proven to be superior. My (then new) 86 F150 came with an OEM plastic/aluminum rad which made me very suspicious but gave me no trouble until a large branch poked a hole through it in 1991. I went through 2 aftermarket traditional brass rads (and these were 'new' purchases) over 3 years, after. They failed through corrosion. Cost me 50% more back in 1994 but I went back to an Al/plastic rad and 21 years later that one is still in place, unoxidized and working fine.
None of the 6 Festys I tangled with, drove or took apart had brass rads in them; all were OEM Al with plastic tubs.
If shining up a decorative brass rad is 'your bag' be forewarned that you're not doing it for any reason other than looks.
None of the 6 Festys I tangled with, drove or took apart had brass rads in them; all were OEM Al with plastic tubs.
If shining up a decorative brass rad is 'your bag' be forewarned that you're not doing it for any reason other than looks.
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