Rockwood
Well-known member
- May 5, 2021
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- 6,862
I disagree. There are cases where removing the thermostat helps.No, the cooling system does not operate at speed correctly when the thermostat removed.
At slow speeds and idle its typically okay.
The water flows too quickly through radiator and doesn't transfer heat properly.
Tim
As long as there is a difference in hose sizes top/bottom, flow restriction should happen naturally.
The more you cool water, the slower it continues to cool due to temperature delta. Keeping water in the radiator and away from the engine would just slow the transfer of heat to the atmosphere.
It can be a problem if you remove a thermostat that controlled water flow to other areas and it just keeps flowing through the bypass instead of the radiator (like in an LS).
Lots of engines actually benefit from complete removal of the thermostat because you can then ditch the bypass circuit (usually goes to the heater) that recirculates hot coolant even with the thermostat open.
Here’s a write up I did for a racecar:
https://motoiq.com/project-infiniti-g20-racecar-even-more-power/4/
Went from occasionally getting hot-ish (210*) normally aspirated, to needing parts of the grille taped off unless it was above 100* or it wouldn’t get above 150*F coolant temps. My buggy has the same setup, never gets hot and I use the fans to regulate temperature since airflow is compromised (no ducting to the radiator).
That being said, that’s for passenger car engines that need to run heaters and throttle body de-icing and worry about startup emissions, not a sport SxS. You shouldn’t need to remove the thermostat in a SxS.
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