Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > 4.4 Thermostats - could it be this easy for a lower temp ? |
|
|
fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1379 |
( I know there are other threads about cooling at the moment, but I think this merits a different thread )
|
||
2nd Sep 2012 8:56pm |
|
fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1379 |
Here are some alternative part numbers:
|
||
2nd Sep 2012 9:12pm |
|
Rob2529 Member Since: 22 Nov 2010 Location: Wirral, uk Posts: 1470 |
Hi mate,
|
||
2nd Sep 2012 9:33pm |
|
fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1379 |
Well, its ordered ... lets see what arrives in the post eh?
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 2:23pm |
|
Simes Member Since: 30 Aug 2011 Location: Hinckley Posts: 964 |
Just out of interest, what are you intending to achieve by this?
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 3:25pm |
|
fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1379 |
In short, I tow a horse box, and run large tyres in the winter. The high nominal temp of a standard stat does not give me much overhead before cooking the engine. dropping the stat temp gives me more temp space fir when I really work the engine.
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 4:27pm |
|
ric355 Member Since: 02 May 2011 Location: Surrey, UK Posts: 302 |
You won't fix a gearbox overheat by reducing the engine coolant temperature, because the gearbox is not cooled by the engine coolant.
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 4:53pm |
|
Saint.v8 Member Since: 13 Jun 2012 Location: UK< Surrey - Near the Middle Close to Some Green Bits Posts: 94 |
If that is the case then why is there a Gearbox Cooler plumbed into the Coolant system?? Take a gander under the boonet on the Drivers side (RHD) near the bottom, small ali heat exchanger with a plastic manifold plumbed to the coolant system! |
||
3rd Sep 2012 5:30pm |
|
Simes Member Since: 30 Aug 2011 Location: Hinckley Posts: 964 |
I do wonder if there is an underlying fault somewhere. I tow a two horse trailer and a twin axle caravan (not at the same time) that's nearly two tons all up. Never had a problem with overheating of either the engine or gearbox. That include towing all over the Welsh mountains in the summer.
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 5:36pm |
|
fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1379 |
I dont get a dash error thrown, its that the gearbox goes into its thermal protection mode by holding lower gears to increase flow of fluid through the cooler and other parts. It does this as a means to protect itself before hitting a full overheat and errors thrown.
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 6:12pm |
|
Simes Member Since: 30 Aug 2011 Location: Hinckley Posts: 964 |
Be interesting to see if it solves your problem. I'd just be a bit concerned if it was me, as the car is designed to tow heavy trailers across the Sahara without overheating! I've never had my gearbox go into any cooling mode - seems to just do the job it's supposed to without complaining. |
||
3rd Sep 2012 6:25pm |
|
ric355 Member Since: 02 May 2011 Location: Surrey, UK Posts: 302 |
My mistake - I was aware there was a cooler, but thought it was separate i.e. exchanged the gearbox fluid with air like the radiator does. |
||
3rd Sep 2012 9:32pm |
|
jim2RRs Member Since: 07 Feb 2012 Location: Genesee, Colorado Posts: 147 |
I disagree, based on my interpretation of RAVE. Which, of course, could be entirely incorrect.
Holding a lower gear (raising the shift point) is used several times, Sport Mode, Hill Mode, and Engine Warm-up Mode. RAVE's description under Engine Warm-up Mode says:
My interpretation of this is that delaying the upshifts generates more heat in the fluid. The cooling strategy reduces engine speed by upshifting sooner, and engaging the TC lock-up; both of these actions reduce the heat in the fluid. It may be holding a lower gear based on what the ECU is interpreting as Hill Mode.
Towing a trailer, in many instances, would mimic the parameters that would activate Hill Mode; high engine torque, high throttle angle & low engine speed. ------ I think it's delaying the upshifts based on the ECU's perception of Hill Mode, not to cool the fluid. Locking up the TC, along with reducing engine speed (and therefore transmission speed) will reduce the amount of heat put into the fluid, which is the best the system can do in an attempt to reduce the fluid temperature. With all that said, you have 2 ways to keep your fluid temperature close to it's happy number: 1. Don't put too much heat into the fluid 2. Extract the excess heat from the fluid as quickly as possible if you fail at #1 Towing a trailer, unless you can manage to always drive downhill, is going to put additional heat into the fluid; that's really all there is to that. So, #1 is a fail. Extracting the excess heat, above the target, is your only option. One of those Laws of Thermodynamics says something about the rate of heat transfer being faster if the differential temperature is larger. So, all other things being equal, let's assume you & I are towing identical trailers on the same roads. My thermostat is 105C, yours is the lower 88C variety. Your thermostat will be fully open at a lower temp than mine. This means your engine will be running cooler than mine, and that your coolant temperature will be lower. Therefore, you should be able to extract heat from your transmission faster than me, since the temperature differential between your engine coolant and trans fluid is larger. This means your trans fluid temperature will also be lower than mine. Here's 1 of the flies in the ointment: The engine ECU will "power open" the thermostat by turning on the thermostat heater "when the engine is under full load and/or high output conditions". So, we're heading up a hill, towing our trailers, and here's where things get weird. The transmission ECU detects Hill Mode, delaying upshifts. This runs the engine faster. The engine ECU detects "high output condition", powers open the thermostat. Now my thermostat is wide open, just like yours. The coolant is dumping heat in both, actually faster in mine, since my coolant temp was higher than yours, so the differential between atmosphere & me is higher than atmosphere & you. Coolant temp goes down, taking trans fluid temp with it. In "normal" towing on flat ground, your trans fluid temp would be lower than mine, but once we start to work it hard, mine will probably come down to match yours pretty quickly. What does all this mean? Beats me. I could be completely wrong on all this. The only thing we know for sure is that the standard thermostat is fully open at 105C. The existence of the heater to power it open implies that it is less than fully open, or perhaps even closed below 105C. Since it's your truck and not mine, I say put the 88C 'stat in it & see what happens. I don't think it likely to cause an engine failure. But if it does, please note that I said "don't think it likely" and "I could be completely wrong", and generally absolve myself of any and all responsibility for your actions. Jim 2000 NAS HSE 2005 NAS HSE |
||
3rd Sep 2012 10:16pm |
|
jim2RRs Member Since: 07 Feb 2012 Location: Genesee, Colorado Posts: 147 |
Ric355:
|
||
3rd Sep 2012 10:26pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2025 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis