With the new electric fan setup, it took some getting used to watching the temp climb to 220* and then drop back down to 200* or so when the fans come on.
220* isn't too hot for the engines unless they start pinging. That's well below even waters boiling point at 15PSI of system pressure.
At idle or climbing logging roads at low speeds in higher heat conditions with the old clutch fan, I didn't notice the temperature "swings" that I do with the electrics. Obviously GM didn't think 220* was a problem, or they wouldn't set the electric setups like that.
Interestingly, but somewhere around 210* seems to be the cooling "peak" under slow moving conditions on my truck. With the clutch fan it never got that warm, so I would never have noticed, but as long as I'm moving even a bit, the temp equalizes right about 210*.
At idle, it will climb to 220* in a few minutes if the vehicle is already at operating temperature, but even a single fan in 85* weather is more than adequate with my 3 row.
I don't like the large variation in temperature, so when I start burning PROM's for this thing, I will bump the coolant fan "on" setting to about 210*. Probably end up playing around with it until I can keep the temperature as steady as possible.