Help on normal operating temps on daily driver OEM 5.0

From what I read a closed loop system takes human intervention out of equation - since the driver does not input any information ( timing , air temps , water temps , A/F ratios ect... ) I would have to say each “ mode “ the car operates in is a closed loop system - during the initial start up of car , until it gets to a predetermined operating point , the car operates in a “ safe mode “ closed loop and ignores the input information from various sensors and operates in a pre-programmed setting from the ECU . Does this sound correct ?
 
Running 225 on the highway would concern me. It should drop on the highway, not go higher.
On my pushrod engine I ran a mr gaskets 180 with a pepboys 3 rom and it pretty much always ran in the 180's.
 
225 is not the end of the world.
But typically when a cooling system is functioning correctly, the temp will go down on the highway.

I'm not specifically telling you to buy a radiator, just saying it sounds odd for it to run cooler in traffic than on the highway.

Does the temp while cruising go up then drop suddenly, then go up again? If so, that's air or low coolant.

If you do buy one, buy a good one. Nothing wrong with more cooling capacity than you need. It's one of the few places i'm a big fan of overkill.

As for the 270, i'd be crapping my pants if my gauge went that high.
 
From what I read a closed loop system takes human intervention out of equation - since the driver does not input any information ( timing , air temps , water temps , A/F ratios ect... ) I would have to say each “ mode “ the car operates in is a closed loop system - during the initial start up of car , until it gets to a predetermined operating point , the car operates in a “ safe mode “ closed loop and ignores the input information from various sensors and operates in a pre-programmed setting from the ECU . Does this sound correct ?
No. That's only part of it. The "loop" is input to output & back to input in a loop, etc. The inputs can change the outputs & the outputs can change the outputs via some of the inputs. A/F is an output.
In open loop, the outputs cannot change the outputs, i.e. the loop is "broken" or open.
Negative feedback in an amplifier would be an example of a continuously operating closed loop system.
 
No sudden swings in temp - I burped like described - a new radiator would not hurt anything and mine may be too old anyway - but .... why still perplexed as why did the engineers at Ford put 270 as danger ?
I wouldn't think too much of it.
The stock gauge is pretty much useless.
Most of them go up and down when you turn on the headlights...

By having a real gauge, you are off to a good start.
 
No. That's only part of it. The "loop" is input to output & back to input in a loop, etc. The inputs can change the outputs & the outputs can change the outputs via some of the inputs. A/F is an output.
In open loop, the outputs cannot change the outputs, i.e. the loop is "broken" or open.
Negative feedback in an amplifier would be an example of a continuously operating closed loop system.
 
Thanks - it is a bit confusing but I get what you are saying - btw , when check engine lights come on cars ( not just Foxes ) does that force system to run in open loop ? Or could it be say , partial open and partial closed
 
Btw - these cars are awesome to drive stock , I can only imagine the feeling of having some of your guys cars and cruising in them - my reason for keeping stock was based on my experience with car stereos , lol - I was always seeking the best sound in music , some bands sounded better acoustically then others - it got to the point where I enjoyed the sound more then the songs ( I could never really relax and enjoy the music , always wanting to fine tune ) - I did put a small old school sub system in this car - a car with no tunes has no soul , lol
 
You are going in the right direction replacing the old radiator.
also check to make sure the lower hose is not collapsing at higher rpms.
the 270 mark on the stock gauge is just the engineers way of inaccurately say'n 'your done'.