cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

DP side mount radiator is aluminum or copper better?

larry_cad
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 2000 American Coach with a Spartan chassis. The side mount radiator is leaking and must be replaced which I am going to do myself. I have been studying replacement radiators and many comments state aluminum is better than copper because it conducts heat better than copper. As a bonus, the aluminum radiators are typically about $200 cheaper. The aluminum radiator typically has plastic tanks and the copper radiator has brass tanks. The copper built is older technology and has many supporters of course.

I am also considering installing a baffle below the radiator to shield it from dust blown up by the fan.

Any thoughts or personal experience with either of the two types??
Today is my personal best for most consecutive days alive.

Our Travel Blog
9 REPLIES 9

Chum_lee
Explorer
Explorer
As long as you use the right coolant and maintain it regularly, IMO, for heavy duty trucks, copper-brass (tanks) on copper-brass (tubes) on copper (fins) win, hands down, every time. They are heavier, generally repairable, more expensive, (than aluminum) and getting harder to find. (and no, I'm not dissing aluminum radiators)

If you're worried about the warranty, IMO, you are buying the wrong product. IMO, a well built brass radiator, well maintained, has a life span measured in decades. If you want to low ball the price, then you NEED a good warranty and roadside assistance!

Chum lee

12th_Man_Fan
Explorer
Explorer
In my opinion the weak link of the aluminum radiator is the plastic tanks. I am sure they both work equally well but I prefer the copper.
2014 GMC Duramax 4X4 DRW Crew

2015 DRV Tradition

larry_cad
Explorer
Explorer
allbrandauto wrote:
copper can be fixed aluminum is throw away


The first one I changed and also this one are both copper and both got chucked in the scrap.
Today is my personal best for most consecutive days alive.

Our Travel Blog

allbrandauto
Explorer
Explorer
copper can be fixed aluminum is throw away

rgatijnet1
Explorer III
Explorer III
Usually the fluid lines on the copper ones are copper but the fins are aluminum. On the all aluminum radiators, the lines and the fins are aluminum.
The road salts can eat away the fins the same on both. The key is to keep the radiator clean with Simple Green EXTREME, which is not corrosive and will not bother aluminum if all of it is not rinsed away. Do not use regular Simple Green. The best way is to squirt the cleaning fluid in from the front side and then apply water pressure from the backside to wash the debris out instead of forcing it deeper in to the fins.

sailor_lou
Explorer
Explorer
As with most things, it not as simple as which one is better. Copper conducts heat better (water to metal), but aluminum transfers heat better into the environment (metal to air). The real key is heat dissipation of both radiators, which considers many different factors (ie: materials, size, number of rows, fin design and spacing, air flow, etc). Do the manufactures provide any info on total heat dissipation?


05 Travel Supreme Envoy info

MountainAir05
Explorer II
Explorer II
just help a friend replace one on a wonderlodge and he replace with Aluminum one. He stated that it ran cooler than the one taken out which was copper which had a bad leaks. I know it was a lot lighter than the one taken out. Ran across this info, some good reading.

http://csfimports.com/copper-brass-radiators/

larry_cad
Explorer
Explorer
Interestingly, the manufacturers offer the exact same warranty for both aluminum and copper of 2 years. I would think the more expensive one would have a longer warranty.
Today is my personal best for most consecutive days alive.

Our Travel Blog

12th_Man_Fan
Explorer
Explorer
Copper Brass is always the better of the two but usually quite a bit more expensive.

Aluminum will work just fine but the copper/brass is much higher quality and should last longer.
2014 GMC Duramax 4X4 DRW Crew

2015 DRV Tradition