Just use water for today - as was mentioned.
Then plan on changing the coolant. 363 hours is past time for fresh antifreeze.
Ok, so I'm the Philistine here :mrgreen: but all these dire warnings in the manuals that you better use OUR coolant or the ogres will come out from under the bed and get you make me go "aaarrrrggghhhhhh"
It's baloney.
It's an engine. It will operate just fine on water. However antifreeze (in the vernacular, Prestone) has some rather nice benefits. It lubricates the water pump. It raises the boiling point. It has additives that inhibit rust and corrosion. And it has buffers that keep the pH from going acidic.
Lessee, that's about it.
Oh wait, yeah I forgot. It keeps the water from freezing 😀
So wander into the nearest auto store, or WallyWorld, or even the Quiky-Mart and ask the clerk, 'ya got any antifreeze?' She will stop chewing her cud, errrr gum, momentarily, jerk her head in the direction of the stack of antifreeze jugs and go back to reading her dog eared copy of Bodice Ripper Monthly. (hey, it takes time to read fine literature, especially when you have to drag your finger along the sentence to keep from getting lost)
Now, the key question. The question of the day, the month, the year, of the universe fer Pete's sake - What Color?
Oh no! Not that question again 😱
Ya see, there is a loose standard for colors of antifreeze. Really loose. The girls at the Mustang Ranch have tighter standards. Ah well, I digress. Anyway, pick any major brand of antifreeze in any color and it will work.
There, I just let the cat out of the bag.
We have over a dozen engines here at the farm. Ranging from 1930's classic John Deere's to rather modern, high speed diesels. Keeping separate jugs in colors of the rainbow is not practical - and certainly not necessary. We have a standard color here - GREEN Like this guy :mrgreen:
Nothing wrong with antifreeze in other colors - but you sure as heck are not going to get Pink Foo-Foo juice (sorry Mike) at the West End in the Bahamas or in Fiji, or a whole lot of other places.
There are currently two oranges, two reds, green, dark green, yellow, blue, blue-green, clear and pink dye colors available
The orange and red antifreezes are an organic acid, not ethylene glycol base, and were designed for a 5 year service life in aluminum engines. I'm not familiar with Pink. The organic acids do not mix well with other colors (except for a short time as an emergency fix to get back to port)
The other colors signify different additive packages for corrosion inhibition, pH control, etc. etc. I won't go into the intricacies of Silicates.
So, when the time comes, drain the coolant, flush the engine with fresh water until it drains clear, then fill with a 50:50 mix of standard coolant - green or blue are usually readily available. Then change your antifreeze every two years and be happy - because your engine will.