Having never really worried about the running temperature of my car. I start reading posts on this site. Lots of posts
Saying their car runs around 80C / 180F on the gauge rising slightly higher in stop / go traffic and hot weather.
(I never understand people saying 85C / 185C how can you be so precise with that gauge)
On my car the gauge needle is horizontal between the 80C and the next white square above. It can idle in the garage
For well over 30-40mins with no movement. May be a slight lift above horizontal. But not much.
Thinking this is not what others see/normal, I start to investigate what I could do. Reading posts about electric fans / water pumps etc.
I thought this would be an interesting winter project.
So recently I followed a couple of other members, and installed a heater bypass with an added Aux water pump (small Bosch unit)
I found from a scrapped MB. This is wired to a temp controller that turns it on at a set temp, I also installed an override switch.
To be quite honest I was a bit disappointed with the result. After bleeding the system the gauge once again is happy to sit
In its horizontal positon.
However having the Aux water pump run after the car is switched of helps a lot with heat soak, and the engine cools nicely.
The Temp controller I used has a probe that is inserted into the fins of the radiator (close to the top hose) and has digital
Display showing the temp. (the instructions for the controller notes that the temp reading from the probe is approx. 10C below
The coolant temp in the rad). Now this display never showed more the 72C after running on an off in the garage for over an hour.
I checked this with an IR temp gun this gave the same reading on the top hose, top of radiator, the pod where the temp gauge
Pick up is.
The temp gauge in the car reads about 1-2mm above horizontal (between 80C and the next square)
This lead me to look at the gauge in the car. After the car had cooled overnight I had a close look at the gauge.
Something I have never really done before. Using a torch to get a better look, I can see that the needle does not
Come to rest on the bottom stop. It is about the thickness of the needle above the stop. Given the non-linear scale of the
Gauge, can I conclude that this would be the reason that the needle is horizontal at normal operating temps?
I have looked through the service history of the car, and found that the temp gauge was replaced in 2008.
The centre cluster has also been removed when the car was painted.
So questions, how accurate are these gauges? Can it be recalibrated so to needle starts from the stop peg ?
It looks to me now like I never had a problem to begin with. My winter project was unnecessary. Well it does help with the heat soak.
So not all bad.