Huh?
You're right that is completely not true. The typical engine water pump cannot create any significant pressure. In fact, flow will fall off exponentially as pressure(from one side of the pump to the other) as pressure increases. Which is why when the thermostat closes flow falls to almost nothing (except for the bypass passages to keep a little water moving to remove hotspots).
The pressure is created from the coolant heating up, which is why the radiator cap (which happens to be on the suction side of the pump, and there is still pressure) releaves the pressure into the reserve tank so pressure does not get excessive.
The water restrictors restrict flow so that it doesn't run too cool. They work good for consitant operations but are independent of ambient air temp. So the engine will run cooler on cooler days.
And taking a thermostat out cannot make an engine run hot unless there is some other problem. There is no way the coolant can go through the radiator too fast, that is a myth. If the radiator can remove heat faster than the engine can make it, (which it has too or it would overheat anyway), then removing the thermostat will only make it run cooler, and it will run even cooler in cooler temps. You just change the rate of coolant temp difference. You may have a lot more flow and the temp of the water flowing through the radiator may be only slight less than the engine temp, but it will be constantly flowing a LOT of water, removing a little heat per gallon with a lot of gallons, and therefore still remove the heat. If you restrict the flow in the radiator to get it too cool down more then the engine will at the same time be heating up more.
I still say hook up your vacuum advance to full manifold vacuum if you haven't. And yes, you might need a bigger radiator. And you need to make sure your fans are shrouded correctly.





