Absolutely I was. Coolant needs to absorb AND release heat. If the radiator is in bad shape it will NOT radiate heat properly. The problem is, this is a *system*, and slowing coolant down in the radiator FORCES coolant to stay in the engine longer. If the engine temp increases, so does the radiator temp, and as that temperature increases, it becomes less and less efficient at radiating heat.JEBSR said:Look, I'm not trying to get in a big conflict over this. Most of the info you are giving is right on. But you are looking at this from the standpoint of what the coolant is doing inside the engine.
Surface area and thermal conductivity are what make a (new) radiator efficient or inefficient, not time the coolant spends in it.
Look at it like this...*if* you had identical trucks, and you had such an efficient water pump on one engine, (and they do make them, perhaps not THIS significant) that at idle, it could push all the coolant through the radiator twice in the time it took the other truck to push it through once, which one would be cooler? That's the equivalent of passing the coolant through a radiator twice as large as in the single pass truck. Larger radiators don't cool better?
Edit: if we want to discuss further, a new thread is probably a good idea.
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Any other ways to make sure it's engaging?