Great point, Wayne, about never running without a thermostat. Many people have an idea that once the engine warms up (which can occur within several minutes on newer cars, seldom on our collectors) that the thermostat opens, and that's the end of it. A thermostat is almost never the cause of overheating, except when actually defective and stuck. The cooling system is simple; coolant gets hot in the engine, and then runs through the radiator, taking the engine heat with it. The radiator then gets hot from the coolant, and the air going through the radiator gets hot, taking that heat from the coolant so the coolant can go back into the engine and get hot again. But as the engine operates, it develops different levels of heat, and if the area of coolant near the thermostat get cooler (less than the set temperature of the thermostat), then the thermostat closes somewhat, thus controlling the amount of coolant passing through. In effect, then, the thermostat helps to regulate the temperature of the engine as it operates up hills, in traffic, rolling along the highway, decelerating, or accelerating. It's a neat little gadget. Mike Higgins 1955 Belvedere Sport Coupe -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Over 25,000 pages of archived Forward Look information can be easily searched at http://www.forwardlook.net/search.htm Powered by Google!
|