170 Degree Thermostat Pros/Cons

Bigjht

New member
I see many have them but I'm curious about not only the advantages but also the disadvantages.  Thanks for the input.
 
Essentially it keeps the car running cooler. Most likely it will play most benificial if you live in a hot area or dueing the summer months up north. Some people say that it may increase engine wear. This is on my list of things to do once spring comes around
 
It would be interesting to hear what Torrie or LMS has to say on the subject. Based on their different tunes, i.e. is it needed or required on LMS' 91 tune and their 93 tune. What about Torries similar tunes?
 
65460 said:
It would be interesting to hear what Torrie or LMS has to say on the subject. Based on their different tunes, i.e. is it needed or required on LMS' 91 tune and their 93 tune. What about Torries similar tunes?

Torrie has not mentioned needing a lower thermostat on any of his 2bar tunes.  FYI
 
regardless of the tune necessity I would think it should help with heat soak, and lower IAT's with a lower engine temps.
 
One of the keys to tuning any engine, and especially boosted engines, is preventing knock or pre-ignition.  Heat alone can set off the combustion of the air fuel mixture (think diesel engines and glow plugs) before the spark plug goes off.  At the wrong location and time of the piston stroke the effects can range from the car pulling timing lowering performance to catastrophic engine failure.  If you compare a naturally aspirated engine and their boosted twin you will generally find a lower compression ratio on the boosted engine.  The more air is compressed the hotter it gets so the goal here is also preventing knock.  A lower thermostat can usually keep the overall operating temperature of the engine down.  This is also partly why lower intake air temperatures are a goal (the other being cooler air is denser, more air=more fuel=vroom).

The problem with all of that is emissions.  I believe the engine burns the fuel more completely at higher operating temperatures lowering emissions.  Since the engine is designed to run at these temperatures to meet emissions standards all of the sizing of the parts fitting together are designed around that temperature range.  Too cold and everything contracts causing slop between all the parts.  Too hot and the parts expand and won't fit together.  Expanded parts cause increased friction causing more heat causing increased expansion causing increased... until the engine seizes.  This is why you shouldn't put an engine under high stress until it has warmed up to operating temperatures.

So...
Normal Tstat
    parts fit together
    less emissions
    better heat in the winter

Lower Tstat
    part slop (can increase wear, oil blow-by piston rings? )
    greater emissions (but people delete cats from downpipes so...)
    lower heat in the winter
    ability to run more advanced timing
    denser air charge due to lower underhood temps

Now in reality I'm not sure the difference in temps between the two tstats will cause enough variance in part sizes to cause any problems.  People have definitely noticed lower air temps coming out of the vents when using the heater. 

You really should have a tune to run a lower tstat.  The ecm will throw a code if the engine doesn't reach the programed operating temperature in a set time frame.
 
I only ever heard the engine oil lubes best when it's at "normal" operating temperatures. That's why typicall you sholdn't see anyone put a cold engine / car on a dyno and beat on it. Yeah the numbers could be slightly inflated becasue the engine is cold but it's just bad practice to beat on a cold engine. I bet everyone knows that so that being said the thogught is cooler running temps the oil is not at hot. Personally I run Mobile 1 Fully Synthetic in my SHO but I don't think the engine oil temp difference in a 170* T-stat, or a stocker is enought difference to change anything. I bet you guys are also all running better oil too ?! Right ??

I beat the snot out of my supercharged / 100 shot NOS 03 Cobra engine with a Reische Performace lower t-stat. Never one problem and it worked great. Immediately saw the lower temps with no side effects. They are costly becasue they are built the proper way check out his website. I bought from him directly a few years back he'a a good guy and knows whathe doing with these things. I believe he supplies LMS etc with their 170* stats.

read up.....

http://reischeperformance.com/tstatinfo.html#anchor
 
My car with stock thermo runs 185 pretty steady.  Not changing mine.  Although most of you need to have something "new" to buy every month...  LOL
 
Don't know that I totally buy into extra wear on the 170 degree stat. I seem to remember 180 being stock temp a long time ago.....before pollution and 170 is not so far from that. It's easy for me to accept that 190 degrees is an emissions motivated mod.
 
Needmoreboost said:
My car with stock thermo runs 185 pretty steady.  Not changing mine.  Although most of you need to have something "new" to buy every month...  LOL

I have considered the 170* thermostat becasue I live in south Texas so I think I could benefit from lower engine temps. I don't see how this would'nt help to some degree just about everyone though.
 
You guys can debate this till the cows come home. Its all meaningless unless someone has HARD data showing one way or the other.
Either Unleashed or LMS or someone else has to show before and after data before I would bother doing it
 
65460 said:
You guys can debate this till the cows come home. Its all meaningless unless someone has HARD data showing one way or the other.
Either Unleashed or LMS or someone else has to show before and after data before I would bother doing it

If it's in the tune you get you need to swap it.  The fans will be programed to come on at lower temps along with who knows what else.  If tune doesn't require it or you're stock I don't think i'd bother.
 
My fans seemingly run all the time. Trying to maintain the 170 but the cars runs at 185-190. Didnt have to OBD scanner before tune so cant speak on before temps.

Anthony at LMS says this normal as part of the tune triggers the fans at lower temp. He did say they can change that parameter maybe fans trigger sooner OR later.

My concern is the more frequent cycling of the fans. That 10 degrees, I dont believe it will make that much difference in anything. Cars designed with margins for error. So the cooler engine, cooler air and more power. Reports also show that synthetic oils cause the engine run cooler as well. And problems reported.
 
Dxlnt1 said:
My fans seemingly run all the time. Trying to maintain the 170 but the cars runs at 185-190. Didnt have to OBD scanner before tune so cant speak on before temps.

Anthony at LMS says this normal as part of the tune triggers the fans at lower temp. He did say they can change that parameter maybe fans trigger sooner OR later.

My concern is the more frequent cycling of the fans. That 10 degrees, I dont believe it will make that much difference in anything. Cars designed with margins for error. So the cooler engine, cooler air and more power. Reports also show that synthetic oils cause the engine run cooler as well. And problems reported.

That's exactly where my coolant temps are with a stock stat.

So why would I do this?
 
I had the same experience, especially in cold weather.  I had the tuner adjust the fans to turn on a little later, still with the 170 TS and my engine temps run a little cooler. 

Sounds opposite, I know.  I noticed in cold air, the fans had been running and the TS housing remained ice cold until the engine temps got to around 186, then I could feel the TS open and the engine would cool down.

In warm and hot weather I didn't have this, the TS seems to be open more, so the temps would stay lower and fans ran fine.
 
I should add that prior to the TS opening, the Fans were still blowing ice cold air keeping the outflow tube to the TS ice cold, but the inflow to the radiator was hot.  Again, in warm weather this didn't apply.
 
dalum said:
One of the keys to tuning any engine, and especially boosted engines, is preventing knock or pre-ignition.  Heat alone can set off the combustion of the air fuel mixture (think diesel engines and glow plugs) before the spark plug goes off.  At the wrong location and time of the piston stroke the effects can range from the car pulling timing lowering performance to catastrophic engine failure.  If you compare a naturally aspirated engine and their boosted twin you will generally find a lower compression ratio on the boosted engine.  The more air is compressed the hotter it gets so the goal here is also preventing knock.  A lower thermostat can usually keep the overall operating temperature of the engine down.  This is also partly why lower intake air temperatures are a goal (the other being cooler air is denser, more air=more fuel=vroom).

The problem with all of that is emissions.  I believe the engine burns the fuel more completely at higher operating temperatures lowering emissions.  Since the engine is designed to run at these temperatures to meet emissions standards all of the sizing of the parts fitting together are designed around that temperature range.  Too cold and everything contracts causing slop between all the parts.  Too hot and the parts expand and won't fit together.  Expanded parts cause increased friction causing more heat causing increased expansion causing increased... until the engine seizes.  This is why you shouldn't put an engine under high stress until it has warmed up to operating temperatures.

So...
Normal Tstat
    parts fit together
    less emissions
    better heat in the winter

Lower Tstat
    part slop (can increase wear, oil blow-by piston rings? )
    greater emissions (but people delete cats from downpipes so...)
    lower heat in the winter
    ability to run more advanced timing
    denser air charge due to lower underhood temps

Now in reality I'm not sure the difference in temps between the two tstats will cause enough variance in part sizes to cause any problems.  People have definitely noticed lower air temps coming out of the vents when using the heater. 

You really should have a tune to run a lower tstat.  The ecm will throw a code if the engine doesn't reach the programed operating temperature in a set time frame.

Excellent post with great understanding. The only other thing I could add is anything below 200*F and there is less flash-off of unburnt fuel and water in the crankcase, but that can be dealt with using the RX PCV system as the ecoboost has such an inefficient system stock.  The denser the air, the more room for oxygen molecules, the more power can be made.
 
You guys brought up so many things, it's hard to address them all but dalum's post is pretty spot on.  The power is in the tune, the lower temperatures just make it safer.  More pros/cons info here: http://www.reischeperformance.com/WhyLowTemp.html

A few more thoughts:

You guys have cold-side thermostat setups which means the thermostat housings don't get hot, when the thermostat opens, it lets in chilled coolant from the radiator... opposite of a traditional setup.

Yes, the heater will be a bit cooler but I'd be surprised if most people would be able to tell the difference.... Personally I can't between a 180* or a 170*, the heat is still very hot.

More engine wear?  Not in the oil analysis that I've seen but there is a sound theory behind this, I've just never seen any evidence of it with our thermostats.  At any rate detonation is far more dangerous for your engine.

Low coolant temp engine code?  Not typically with our 170* thermostats, tuned or not.  I'm not saying it's not possible but I've never had a customer come to me with that issue.  I did see a post somewhere saying somebody knew somebody that had a problem but I can't be certain what product the 3rd party was running, he did not contact me.

Higher emissions?  Possibly, but plenty of vehicles have passed California emission tests with our thermostats (however not technically legal for street use in CA) which are some of the highest standards around.

If your fan is running all the time or excessively then the fan settings are too low and this should be addressed by retuning.
 
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