Hi guys,

Long time no hear! You guys know me from my wacko questions in the past,
and I have another one. It is an ancient history question -- maybe Alfa
related, maybe just generally automotive related. You guys always have
such a fount of knowledge I thought certainly you'd have an answer.

I have been translating some old letters from Swedish to English. In one
of the letters, from the 1930s, the writer starts talking about cars. What
I want to know is how water was used in engines from the 30s -- were they
water cooled, air-cooled, etc.? Did they have thermostats? Was there
anything special about cold weather?

The writer is describing how to avoid a certain kind of accident where you
burn yourself from boiling water -- he doesn't say whether in the engine
or in the radiator. But apparently whatever procedure they are doing, it
is a procedure one might encounter routinely. Did people routinely add
water to the radiator in those days?

I've been trying to think of a situation where I would regularly come in
contact with hot water in my 'modern' (1980s) cars. The thermostat deals
with that.

Thanks for any ideas!

Tess
in Bellevue, WA USA
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