FWI-Don't stick your digits in the flex fan or you will repeat last year!
Now you are just taking all the fun out of building....FWI-Don't stick your digits in the flex fan or you will repeat last year!
Ok @kgblazerfive i threw on a flex fan... it actually helped, drove around for 30 or 45 mins down bangater and in traffic and it only hit 212, BUT it did creep up at a light from 206 to 212 pretty quick, telling me offroad it may keep going...one step...........
Your fan to shroud depth looks good. I'd say if it's creeping up when not driving that you are not get enough air through the radiator itself to remove the heat from the coolant. If alot of air goes out the bottom and sides then it's not going through the radiator.
Funny you should mention that. This truck is in my shop right now. 1988 K30 reg cab dually. 454/465. It does not have the larger 6.2 radiator. It's a solid 6" narrower than mine. But it is factory.Walking around the junkyard the other day all the 454 trucks I saw were from the 90s. What interested me is that I noticed they all had the 19"x34" radiators. I wondered if they did that because by then most all trucks were coming standard with AC.
Funny you should mention that. This truck is in my shop right now. 1988 K30 reg cab dually. 454/465. It does not have the larger 6.2 radiator. It's a solid 6" narrower than mine. But it is factory.![]()
If the pic don't work I'll fix it when I get home.
Yeah I think that was the standard in the 80's for 454 trucks. I think the "standard" radiator for the other gas engines was 17" tall. That's what my crew cab had with the original 350.I swear i measured 29×19 core size (not measuring the tanks on the sides.
I have the fitech in the thermostat and my mechanical in my intake manifold. The one on the intake usually reads about 5 degrees cooler but hits the high numbers.
Most of the time GM always took the temp reading from the head. Big block, small block, LS, all in the head. Not sure of the reasoning behind it, but that's where mine are. I've got one on the passenger side head for my gauge, drivers side head for the ECM. Even with the questionable accuracy on the stock gauges, mine are pretty darn close. It may have to do with calming the gauge down. Having the sender in the intake near the t-stat is going to allow the unit to detect the temp changing as the t-stat opens and closes. It's more "live" data, and if the t-stat is closed it's going to read the hottest. Meaning the gauge is going to be more active, going up and down as the t-stat opens and closes. On the flip side taking the reading at the head is catching the temp with coolant coming in from the radiator and pump. Yes it's gaining heat from the cylinders but the value is more steady and not as quick to change when all is working like it should. If the t-stat is stuck closed, the gauge is going to still go hot. If the radiator is dirty it will still cause that sensor to read hot. It's just not seeing the rapid changes of the t-stat opening and closing. When I had the smaller radiator in my K5, the only time the engine ran hot was low speed crawling, didn't matter if it was hot or cooler outside (except snow wheeling). With my sender in the head I could still see the temps climbing and had enough warning to kick it into a lower gear and spin the engine/pump faster to cool it back down again. My theory may be all wet though too.I swear i measured 29×19 core size (not measuring the tanks on the sides.
I have the fitech in the thermostat and my mechanical in my intake manifold. The one on the intake usually reads about 5 degrees cooler but hits the high numbers.
Im not sure that i caught the comment on having space...The depth looks about right half in and half out. Sounds like it may be working fine. Maybe a bigger one if it can fit looks like you have a lot of space from the fan to the shroud, maybe not enough room to fit but who knows.