naturist wrote:
The stock fan clutch is a piece of junk. Has been from the get go.
Lots of people experience the same thing: gauge never budges off just left of center, until you tow, uphill, in 80+ weather.
The inline thermostat is not your friend under those conditions. The stock one is designed to circulate water no matter what, and to keep the engine temperature as uniform as possible throughout the block and head. I think the inline one is asking for cracked head and/or block, but what do I know?
Well, one thing I do know, the stock fan clutch is extremely fragile, wears out very quickly, and engages in the first place way too late. Spring for a Hayden heavy duty, the one that kicks in at 170˚F.
Without question, his stock clutch has failed - They are all complete CRAP and should be junked. The Hayden is a much better option, not just for the lower temperature (and that is AIR temperature coming off the much hotter radiator!) but just because it is a stronger design. Whether you choose to use the 02-07 3.7L gasser plastic fan (With tow package) or stick with the heavier metal CRD fan... That is a personal choice. I contend they both move the same amount of air, but it is MUCH more important that you have a clutch that works.
Now... About the thermostat and Naturist's comment above: I disagree about the inline thermostat being a problem here. When the temperature is at the normal running temp, the thermostat is fully open and offering the better part of a 1 inch port for the water to flow. Our system doesn't flow THAT MUCH water that this would be any more of a restriction than the multitude of small ports in the factory thermostat that REMAIN OPEN all the time once the factory thermostat has failed open. Naturist: You say that the factory thermostat design allows water to flow all the time. This is true, but as Mark (Kapzinski) discovered - The thermostat acts as a double-valve in normal operation, keeping the outflow ports to the radiator and elsewhere closed until the temp was up to spec, then ONLY closing off the "return-to-engine" loop when the engine was up to temp. At all times, the loops through the heater core, overflow / reservoir bottle, EGR, and viscous clutch remain open and flowing.
The loop of "return-to-engine" is a small one, throughout much of its length. This (IMHO) forms far more of a restriction to the easy flow than the momentary reduction to 1 inch from the 1.75 inch main radiator supply line. The FACTORY thermostat port offers less of a clearance when fully open (working OR failed) so I would posit that the failed clutch caused more of his heating issues than the in-hose thermostat, simply because he was loading the engine heavily with that grade and the towing... But the engine had ONLY the forward momentum to cool itself with that 90 degree road-heated air.
Get the Hayden 2905 clutch, put that in and give it another go before you pull that thermostat - Engines have been working with similar sized thermostat holes for decades, and on much larger engines than this one. You just asked a lot of your motor in hot conditions. No surprise that it got a little bit of sweat on.