minifridge1138
Well-known member
If the engine coolant is too low, then the oil does not get hot enough to boil out the blow-by.
This causes the oil to degrade, which reduces lubrication.
As I mentioned earlier, I've tried 3 different 180 thermostats from Mr. Gasket and they all ran closer to 140 than 180.
I finally bought a "cheap" 180 thermostat and drilled two small holes in it. This is basically what the Mr. Gasket thermostat does (it allows a small amount of fluid to flow even when the thermostat is closed).
Running a colder thermostat does NOT increase power. Cooler AIR increases power, not cooler engine temp. Colder air is more dense then warm air. Dense air has more oxygen. This is why carburetors need to be adjusted for high altitudes (it is also why it is hard to breath at higher altitudes). Switching to a 160 thermostat does not decrease the temperature of the air, therefore it does not make more power.
This causes the oil to degrade, which reduces lubrication.
As I mentioned earlier, I've tried 3 different 180 thermostats from Mr. Gasket and they all ran closer to 140 than 180.
I finally bought a "cheap" 180 thermostat and drilled two small holes in it. This is basically what the Mr. Gasket thermostat does (it allows a small amount of fluid to flow even when the thermostat is closed).
Running a colder thermostat does NOT increase power. Cooler AIR increases power, not cooler engine temp. Colder air is more dense then warm air. Dense air has more oxygen. This is why carburetors need to be adjusted for high altitudes (it is also why it is hard to breath at higher altitudes). Switching to a 160 thermostat does not decrease the temperature of the air, therefore it does not make more power.