First thing that came to my mind was a bearing spinning and no I haven't seen such a thing only in the pretty picture books 


rumbly truck said:I serviced on a emd switcher locomotive in rock spring wyoming. It was on a 30 day service schedule,from one trip to the next it developed a antifreeze leak in the crankcase. It was making the oil milkshake. It also had a spun rod bearing.An EMD engine shares a common crankpin for two con rods, being two stroke they have compression against the rodbearing all the time.The upper shell locates into the blade rod, with two dowels. The bearing was spinning in the rod bore and around the crankshaft. The wrist pin was recieving oil, as the wrist pin bushing was still intact. This unit was in light service at the time , with about 250 hours between service. I point but,there something new when you spin wrenches for a living all the time
this is ColoradoK5, the K5 represents a line of fullsize trucks produced by General Motors. to my knowledge, GM has never used a 2 stroke in a widely produced automotive application. furthermore, they havent used a locomotive engine. i'd like to personally thank you for wasting our bandwidth. 
dyeager535 said:Check the properties of glycol and water, you'll see that water absorbs heat more readily than glycol, which means it's a better coolant in that regard alone.
Then check out the antifreeze manufacturers web sites, and look at their charts of "boilover" protection. You'll notice that most (all I've seen) have in the fine print "tested at 15PSI". Then find the boiling point of water at 15PSI, and you'll see that antifreeze does NOT add as much temp to the boiling point of water as pressure alone does. (figure out boiling point of water at 15PSI, then subtract that from the manufacturers data, it's something like 15* IIRC) They'd like you to believe that, which is why they show data collected at 15PSI.
I've done all this research, I know why they call it "antifreeze". That's all it's good for, along with being a corrosion inhibitor and any lubricants/conditioners that are in it for seals.