March 10, 2026
Why Glycol Levels Determine Your System's Life
In the world of modern building services, we often focus on the "heavy metal"—pumps, boilers, and chillers. But for the average facility manager, the hydronic fluid inside those pipes is often "out of sight, out of mind," treated as a static asset rather than a living chemical solution. Failing to monitor this invisible engine is no longer just a maintenance oversight; it’s a high-stakes gamble with your equipment's lifespan and your facility’s bottom line.
The Invisible Engine: Why Glycol Health is Non-Negotiable
Glycol is more than just "antifreeze." In a closed-loop hydronic system, it serves two critical functions: freeze protection and corrosion inhibition. However, glycol is organic. Over time, heat and oxygen cause it to break down into organic acids (glycolic and formic acids). This process lowers the pH of your fluid, turning your heat-transfer medium into a corrosive "acid bath" that eats away at copper, steel, and cast-iron components.
The Warning Signs of Fluid Failure
The "Health Check" Checklist
To ensure your system reaches its 20+ year design life, implement these annual checks:
| Glycol % | 25% – 50% (Site specific) | Prevents bursting in winter and boiling in summer. |
| pH Level | 8.5 – 10.5 | Keeps the fluid alkaline to prevent metal leaching. |
| Inhibitor Levels | 1000+ ppm | Provides a protective film on the internal pipe walls. |
| Conductivity | Varies by fluid | Measures the total dissolved solids; high levels suggest contamination. |
Conclusion: Protect Your Investment
Whether you are retrofitting an older facility or using the latest prefabricated modular design, the chemistry inside the pipes dictates the ROI of the hardware outside them. A system with neglected glycol is a system on a countdown to failure.







