Home Ā» Pepsi Is As Refreshing For Your Car As It Is For Your Tastebuds

Pepsi Is As Refreshing For Your Car As It Is For Your Tastebuds

Pepsi Coolant Ts Copy
ADVERTISEMENT

Combustion-engined vehicles rely on a number of vital fluids. You need good fuel, good oil to keep the engine lubricated, and good coolant to keep the engine from overheating and seizing up. Or, you know, you could just use a few bottles of Pepsi. Wait, what?

This madcap experiment comes to us fromĀ Garbage Time. It’s an Australian YouTube channel about cheap old carsā€”known as “nuggets”ā€”and doing silly things with them. You might know the host better as tech Youtuber Dankpods, but his infectious mannerisms have translated well to the world of automotive tomfoolery, too.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Don’t worryā€”as ridiculous as this sounds, we’re going to dig deep. We’re looking at how Pepsi performs as a coolant on both short-term and long-term timescales. This is the real consumer advice you need. Read on.

Is Pepsi Okay?

A used 2009 Proton Saga served as the mule for this test. Known as the S16 in Australia, it was the cheapest car on the local market in 2009. Retailing for just $11,990, you got a 1.6-liter four-cylinder engine for your money with 110 wild horses under the hood. But could those horses survive on Pepsi?

ADVERTISEMENT
I Replaced My Coolant With Pepsi. 0 39 Screenshot
Ah, the S16. I’m not sure more than 30 Australians remembered you until this video came out.

The experiment was ultimately a straightforward one. The coolant was drained, and replaced with the fizzy soft drink that has always wanted to be Coke. This wasn’t as easy as you might think, as the Pespi fizzed up a great deal during the filling process.

With a few liters of Pespi in the cooling system, the Proton had its engine started, and the torture began. It took some time to get things up to temperature, but after a good while, the thermostat was open and the Pepsi was circulating.

Tempy
The Proton happily ran at its usual temperature with Pepsi in the pipes.

At this point, you might have expected calamity in short order. Surely the sugary Pepsi would caramelize and clog up the cooling channels. Or perhaps all the carbon dioxide in the soft drink would cause an air bubble precipitating the end. Surely the engine would overheat before long!

And yet, it soldiered on. The temperature gauge rose as per normal, and the Pepsi cooled the engine without complaint. Even hours of drive tests weren’t enough for the Malaysian donk to give up the ghost. So what gives?

Soup
The Proton survived a run on Adelaide’s hellish South Road.

Well, as it turns out, Pepsi is a fine choice of engine coolant, under very specific circumstances. That might sound wild, but here’s the thingā€”Pepsi is, by and large, mostly just water. And water cools engines really well! Fundamentally, if you put a bunch of water in your engine’s cooling system, it’ll run all day. Using Pepsi instead just isn’t that much different.

ADVERTISEMENT

The carbonation doesn’t really cause problems, either. The solubility of carbon dioxide in the fluid reduces significantly at high temperatures. Thus, as the Pepsi heats up, the bubbles come out of solution quite quickly, and would be quite easy to burp out of the system. There’s a benefit to the sugar in Pepsi, too. Solutions of sugar and water have an elevated boiling point, something which is beneficial in a cooling fluid.

Plus, Pepsi is cheap! A gallon of premix coolant costs around $18.95. You can get over a gallon of Pepsi for less than $5. Winning, right?

Poison
Pepsi! It’s 80% cheaper than conventional coolant, and it’s not poisonous! via Walmart

“But we don’t use water as coolant!” you cry. “And Pepsi has to be bad!” Hold on, hold on. I’m getting there.

Fundamentally, you’re on the money. But let’s start with water. There are two prime reasons we don’t use water as coolant. The first is freezing pointā€”if water freezes inside your engine’s cooling channels, it’s almost certainly going to do damage. Hence why coolant is commonly referred to as “antifreeze,” as it contains agents to lower its freezing temperature. Secondly, running plain water can lead to corrosion over time. This can cause leaks or clogs as corrosion byproducts build up in cooling channels.

Real
The reason we use proper coolant is because it’s full of useful anti-freeze and anti-corrosion additives. Credit: Lewin Day

For both of those reasons, you shouldn’t actually use Pepsi as an engine coolant. It’s probably worse for your engine than water, given that it’s slightly acidic. This shit can clean coins, so it’ll gladly start chewing away at metals in your cooling system. It’ll also freeze fairly easily if you live in a colder area.

ADVERTISEMENT

What does this mean? Well, if you’re in an emergency situation with no coolant and you really just need to keep the engine going for a few hours, Pepsi will do the trick. However, it’s bad for your engine, and you’d want to get it out of there quickly to avoid corrosion. I’ve seen straight tap water clog a brand new radiator in a year flat. I’d suspect Pepsi would do the same in months, if not weeks.

But what aboutĀ the sugar? Will it cook inside the hot engine, and clog things up? That’s an interesting question. On the one hand, it’s commonly said that sugar caramelizes at around 320 Ā°F. Meanwhile, the average engine thermostat is set somewhere around 195 to 220 Ā°F. Under the 15 psi of pressure inside the cooling system, the boiling point of water raises, too, so it’s unlikely to start boiling until around 248 Ā°F or above. 50:50 coolant mixes raise this to 265 F, because ethylene glycol coolant has a higher boiling point than water.

Boiledket
Even boiled in a kettle, the Pepsi didn’t caramelize into a sticky mess.

Based on those numbers, it seems unlikely the sugars would caramelize too easily. This is also borne out later in the video, when boiling Pepsi in a kettle actually goes relatively cleanly, with no sticky residues spotted.

However, there are some reports that caramelization can happen at lower temperatures on a longer time scale, so I wouldn’t trust the Pepsi in there for long. Plus, there’s a side risk here. If you’re running Pepsi as coolant and you have some kind of leak, that could cause all kinds of trouble. If it’s seeping past the head gasket, the coolant would absolutely boil and leave sticky deposits everywhere inside the engine. Similarly, if it’s dripping out of a pipe on to a hot exhaust or oil pan, that’s going to be an ugly mess, too.

So, what’s the upshot here? Well, Pepsi is mostly water. Thus, you can pour it in your radiator and your car will work surprisingly fine. At the same time, it will be eating away at your engine and you really shouldn’t do this unless you absolutely really have to. Hope that helps! As always, stay milky.

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: Garbage Time via YouTube Screenshot, Walmart, Lewin Day

 

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
89 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jblues
Jblues
4 months ago

Doesn’t Pepsi also contain propylene glycol?

TheDrunkenWrench
TheDrunkenWrench
4 months ago

Pepsi flush for the engine? What’s next? Diet coke & mentos interior wash?

Angrycat Meowmeow
Angrycat Meowmeow
4 months ago

Nuggets can have little a Pepsi, as a treat.

Millermatic
Millermatic
4 months ago

Seems like using Diet Sprite would be a better choice? And tap water would be better than that? And distilled water better still?

Iā€™m having trouble thinking of a scenario where Iā€™d have to pick Pepsi over water.

I can , perhaps, see a scenario where I had beer but no waterā€¦. But if that were the case (pun not intended) Iā€™d have to weigh how far I was willing to walk to just buy coolant instead of wasting beer. That cost more than coolant.

ES
ES
4 months ago
Reply to  Millermatic

then you’re drinking wrong.

(jk, sobriety was like getting a second paycheck).

Marathag
Marathag
4 months ago

Try an almost Long Island Iced Tea, just 50-50 with grain alcohol
That should fix the freezing problem

rctothefuture
rctothefuture
4 months ago
Reply to  Marathag

You’ll have a slight performance boost when the headgasket starts leaking as well!

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
4 months ago

Well, it probably makes an excellent radiator flush with all that phosphoric acid.

BigThingsComin
BigThingsComin
4 months ago

Urine works too. Just sayin’.

Prizm GSi
Prizm GSi
4 months ago
Reply to  BigThingsComin

I saw that in a documentary about Colorado once.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
4 months ago
Reply to  BigThingsComin

Hell, beer will get you home in a pinch.
But it does stink up the car.

Chris Arter
Chris Arter
4 months ago
Reply to  BigThingsComin

Someone must have watched “Red Dawn”…

I Heart Japanese Cars
I Heart Japanese Cars
4 months ago
Reply to  Chris Arter

I was looking for this.

Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
4 months ago

(ā—”ą«‚ā—”) Hmm, makes you wonder how well Kool-Aid would of worked.

Says “Kool”, right in the name, afterall! šŸ˜‰

Last edited 4 months ago by Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Abe Froman
Abe Froman
4 months ago

Finally, a use for Pepsi.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
4 months ago

So, youā€™re saying that if I run out of mixers at my next cocktail party, I can use Prestone instead, right?

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
4 months ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

It makes a killer margarita.

Icouldntfindaclevername
Icouldntfindaclevername
4 months ago

I can tell you Mtn. Dew works. We actually had to use it in a friend’s toyota. Granted it wasn’t 100% Mtn. Dew but it was enough to fill the radiator when it blew the upper hose on a trip.

Amschroeder5
Amschroeder5
4 months ago

As meme worthy as that is, Mtn. Dew should be quite a good bit less acidic than cola/phosphoric acid based sodas. Honestly, Diet Mtn Dew should be pretty damn good as a coolant. Citric acid is much less harsh, and the second ingredient by weight is already orange juice (0% juice), aka it is almost exclusively carbonated water by volume and weight, and the additives are insanely strong.

Dead Elvis, Inc.
Dead Elvis, Inc.
4 months ago
Reply to  Amschroeder5

Diet Dew clocks in at a pH of 3.18 (vs 3.22 for the sugared version), vs Pepsi at 2.39 (3.02 for Diet Pepsi).

Data
Data
4 months ago

Cheeseburger, cheeseburger, cheeseburger. No Coke, Pepsi.

Scoutdude
Scoutdude
4 months ago
Reply to  Data

Cheeburger.

Bruno Hache
Bruno Hache
4 months ago

Lol, good old Dank Pods. Never thought I would see one of his here.

Frankencamry
Frankencamry
4 months ago

Should we expect an article on whether your car will explode if you use ethanol as a coolant next?

Sometimes I forget that there are new people born every minute that have to discover all these things for themselves, and for some reason do so by providing clicks instead of just asking google. And then I slowly dissolve into a pile of cranky, grumbling dust.

Dead Elvis, Inc.
Dead Elvis, Inc.
4 months ago
Reply to  Frankencamry
Grey alien in a beige sedan
Grey alien in a beige sedan
4 months ago

That youtube channel should trying using pee instead of DEF… I mean, they both contain a bunch of urea – so in theory, it should work. I can’t imagine how bad that would smell though.

Library of Context
Library of Context
4 months ago

I’m diabetic. Can I use Diet Pepsi as coolant?

Last edited 4 months ago by Library of Context
Grey alien in a beige sedan
Grey alien in a beige sedan
4 months ago

Nope… only Diet Rite. Just like Max Headroom once opined, “Don’t say the P word”.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
4 months ago

What have you got against Tab?

10001010
10001010
4 months ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

I can’t give you a tab unless you order something.

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
4 months ago
Reply to  10001010

Just gimme a Pepsi Free.

Last edited 4 months ago by Rad Barchetta
Peter Andruskiewicz
Peter Andruskiewicz
4 months ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

If you want a Pepsi pal, ya gotta pay for it!

J Hyman
J Hyman
4 months ago

That solves the sugar caramelization issue!

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
4 months ago

Straight water is used as a coolant in race cars. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with it at all. And it’s easier to clean off the track when it leaks or a hose explodes.

Coolant/antifreeze is only used instead because of the freezing problem mentioned, and because it provides anti-corrosion protection. The boiling point really isn’t a problem because, under the pressure of the cooling system, the boiling point of water raises anyway.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
4 months ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

One thing worth pointing out is that water has a higher specific heat than antifreeze, so if you aren’t worried about low temps, water would do a better job

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
4 months ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

Plus water doesnā€™t burn, but antifreeze does.

Scoutdude
Scoutdude
4 months ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

Yup straight water does a better job than 50% water 50% Ethylene Glycol which is why if you live in a hot climate 60% water 40% antifreeze is the better choice and is mentioned in the owner’s manual as an acceptable mix. Enough antifreeze for the corrosion and more water for better cooling.

Logan King
Logan King
4 months ago

I try not to think about all of the industrial uses that colas have while I’m drinking it.

Hotdoughnutsnow
Hotdoughnutsnow
4 months ago

Why wouldn’t you use Mountain Dew – it’s the same color?

NebraskaStig
NebraskaStig
4 months ago

1. Do not waste Mountain Dew like that šŸ™‚
2. In my travels to Asia, the Dew is extremely hard to find, almost non-existent. Maybe that’s the reason here. There was only one place I found it in Vietnam from my several weeks long trip there and it was a very remote place. I purchased 3 of them and they were delicious

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
4 months ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

Do you also enjoy banjo music? /s

CRX89
CRX89
4 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

That’s the other kind of mountain dew

NebraskaStig
NebraskaStig
4 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

I do!! How’d you know?!?

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
4 months ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

Uneducated guess?

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Grey alien in a beige sedan
4 months ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

It’s fine to waste Mountain Dew… or as all the scientists on here call it “fermented buffalo urine”.

Drew
Drew
4 months ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

Eeew…I’ll take the crab juice.

(I actually kind of like Mountain Dew, but I could not resist)

Lockleaf
Lockleaf
4 months ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

I know Japan has it, but otherwise, i have nothing of value to provide here. Except yes, what a waste of good dew.

Jblues
Jblues
4 months ago
Reply to  NebraskaStig

Kickapoo Joy Juice is Mtn Dew. You can find that much easier in Asia.

Jdoubledub
Jdoubledub
4 months ago

Wonder if it would clean the rust out of the water jackets on an iron block.

Alexk98
Alexk98
4 months ago
Reply to  Jdoubledub

This reminded me of the guy that sued after claiming to have found a dead rat in his can of Coke, but the company showed that should an entire rat have ended up in the can as was claimed, it would have nearly entirely dissolved by the time the consumer would get their hands on the can, and the guy lost the suit. All of this to say, cleaning rusty water jackets is well within the realm of possibility.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
4 months ago
Reply to  Alexk98

Based on the rats I’ve seen, it would have needed to be a really large can for one to fit.

The Dude
The Dude
4 months ago
Reply to  Alexk98

So… What Coke is saying is if your Coke tastes a bit off there’s a chance you got the special rat flavored bottle.

Drew
Drew
4 months ago

As always, stay milky.

Well, how does milk work for this use? And, of course, as long as we’re asking, what if you’re making good use of your own fluids Bear Grylls style? This could be a whole series of tests on just coolant! Add some other stuff to the mix and you could really keep this going.

Frankencamry
Frankencamry
4 months ago
Reply to  Drew

Milk effectiveness would depend substantially on fat content. Skim would probably work as well as Pepsi.

Drew
Drew
4 months ago
Reply to  Frankencamry

Yeah, but I really want to see how long someone can drive around on whole milk. Or maybe even half and half. Cleaning it out of there after will be a mess. We could get really goofy with this!

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
4 months ago
Reply to  Drew

And what about Prius drivers who might want to use soy or other nut milks? How do THEY stack up?

Live2ski
Live2ski
4 months ago
Reply to  Frankencamry

Kramer used his blood šŸ˜‰

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
4 months ago
Reply to  Frankencamry

You’re forgetting about the proteins. They’d still curdle.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
4 months ago
Reply to  Drew

Sounds like a great way to make yogurt.

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
4 months ago

I think what would scare me most of the fear that there would forever be Pepsi in the system afterwards. Having had to change the coolant on the truck back at Christmas, what I got out was substantially less than stated capacity. My understanding is that a lot of coolant rests in the block and lines and you’ll never get it out without positive pressure.

If this is wrong or inaccurate, please correct me – I genuinely want to know more and do better about this.

IRegertNothing, Esq.
IRegertNothing, Esq.
4 months ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

That sounds about right. Youā€™d have to flush the whole cooling system to get all the Pepsi out. Now would the left over Pepsi in the system cause problems if you did a drain and fill with automotive coolant? That I donā€™t know. It would be heavily diluted by that point.

Angry Bob
Angry Bob
4 months ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

Yeah, you only get about 2/3rd of the coolant out from the drain plug.

Flush till the water comes out clean. Drain. Add 50% rated capacity with full strength anti-freeze and then top off with plain water. Easy.

I’m kind of surprised this is even an article. A car should run for years with pepsi as coolant. Fill it with 100% muriatic acid or something and then see what happens.

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
4 months ago
Reply to  Angry Bob

Cool. That’s what came to learn and ultimately executed. It was just tough finding a source that said it plain language.

Cerberus
Cerberus
4 months ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

Yeah, you’ll have to flush it to get it all out. I did that myself once. If I ever need to do that again, I will pay someone as it is messy and far more of a PITA than I thought it would be and now my old driveway is a superfund site (not really and it didn’t even end up killing any grass, especially so watered down, but it did piss me off just the same).

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
4 months ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

The proven science of homeopathy says that even an immeasurably tiny amount of Pepsi when diluted with extremely large quantities of water will still leave you with a liquid thatā€™s exactly as effective as pure Pepsi.

Scoutdude
Scoutdude
4 months ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

You are correct that pulling the radiator plug will only drain a portion of the system, a lot is left in the block, heater core, hoses ect. For a better chance of getting everything out leave the cap on and disconnect the “upper” heater hose at the core or top of the engine. Then open the radiator’s drain plug. I like to plug the hose side initially so that it sucks more out of the heater core, once that starts sucking air plug the core and open the hose side. Depending on the vehicle it can get out an extra 1/2 gallon or more. Of course you can always flush it, but then you do need to use full strength coolant, which is getting harder to find.

Tbird
Tbird
4 months ago

Acid radiator flush!

Curtis Loew
Curtis Loew
4 months ago
Reply to  Tbird

That was my first thought too. It probably cleaned the cooling system.

Lockleaf
Lockleaf
4 months ago
Reply to  Curtis Loew

This was what I was thinking too. Nice derusting of a cooling system, then flush and reinstall coolant. I wonder if I have a radiator laying around for testing purposes…..

Amschroeder5
Amschroeder5
4 months ago
Reply to  Tbird

cola is a bit harsh for that, the big phosphoric acid cleanse… but clear sodas like mtn dew or sprite probably are quite effective with that (especially diets which use tiny amounts of sweetener).

IRegertNothing, Esq.
IRegertNothing, Esq.
4 months ago

Awesome. Now I want to see how the car does with coffee filters in the air cleaner and fish oil in the engine.

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
4 months ago

And cooking oil as windshield washer fluid?

Or liquid soap as brake fluid?

“Food” for thought?

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
4 months ago
Reply to  Col Lingus

Liquid soap as brake fluid sounds terrible but I have it on good authority from someone who used it that corn syrup can be used as emergency hydraulic fluid (in a hydraulic clutch with an independent reservoir anyway).

It’ll get you home but you’ll have to completely disassemble or replace the system. This was a ’72 Datsun 510 so that was cheap and easy to do.

I wouldn’t use it as brake fluid unless I had a substantial life insurance policy on the driver.

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
4 months ago

Whale oil used to be a significant component of auto trans fluid until the govts got involved with endangered species. And it was difficult to find a replacement that worked as well.

10001010
10001010
4 months ago

All I wanted was a Pepsi, just one Pepsi!

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
4 months ago
Reply to  10001010

NO YOU’RE ON DRUGS!!!

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
4 months ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

It doesn’t matter, I’ll probably get hit by a car anyway

Day One Dave
Day One Dave
4 months ago
Reply to  10001010

Your schools, your institutions…

89
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x