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overheating?

  • Thread starter Thread starter the98stang
  • Start date Start date Jul 11, 2008

the98stang

Active Member
Aug 12, 2005
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47
Clovis, CA
Jul 11, 2008
#1
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #1
Well it has been DAMN hot these last few weeks (100-112^). My car now reads around 210^ in this weather. During the night when it's 90^ she reads 195^. Am I overheating the engine? Fans are kicking on for sure...
 

Stark77

Member
Jun 11, 2008
501
0
16
Tallahassee, FL
Jul 11, 2008
#2
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #2
WHOA - that engine temp is pretty high. I don't have a temp gauge that has degrees(there's a way to monitor it on my LiveWire, I'm just not sure how yet) - but based on the outside temp here in Jax, FL (low 100's with humidity) and based on the fact that my engine temp gauge never moves past the middle - I would say you're having an overheating issue. Have you changed out your theromstat? Ever done a radiator/coolant system flush or vacuum? Oil + Filter change?
 

Mustang5L5

That is…until I whipped out my Bissell
Mod Dude
Feb 18, 2001
43,145
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Massachusetts
Jul 11, 2008
#3
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #3
210 is close to the upper limit of normal range for a modern EFI engine. 220 is considered the start of overheating and when heads can start to warp and be damaged.


Time for a rad flush and 50/50 mix with water wetter if it's been over 2 years since the last flush
 
B

BobHyatt

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Aug 7, 2007
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Jul 11, 2008
#4
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #4
Mustang5L5 said:
210 is close to the upper limit of normal range for a modern EFI engine. 220 is considered the start of overheating and when heads can start to warp and be damaged.


Time for a rad flush and 50/50 mix with water wetter if it's been over 2 years since the last flush
Click to expand...

220 is ok in a pressurized system. So long as the water can't flash to steam, nothing bad is going to happen. Head warpage doesn't happen until 500+ and that requires that the water not flow thru the head.

That said, mustangs have a decent radiator. Things to check. (1) thermostat. They can begin to stick although it does not sound like your problem. (2) coolant system flush. Gunk in the radiator inhibits heat transfer from water to fins. (3) (much more common) electric fan not operating. Car will overheat in traffic or at slow speeds, but be fine on interstate...
 

rabidscoobie

10 Year Member
Jun 21, 2007
616
12
48
College Station,TX
Jul 11, 2008
#5
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #5
Those are pretty normal temps for about in any car in my area of Texas,very hot and VERY HUMID.My temps stay around that in city driving,on the hwy they may get down to 180-190.I have had these temps on every car ive owned for the last 16-17 years(all v8's).The camaro's and TA's i have owned basically run those temps and higher as normal ranges.
 

rabidscoobie

10 Year Member
Jun 21, 2007
616
12
48
College Station,TX
Jul 11, 2008
#6
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #6
Stark77 said:
WHOA - that engine temp is pretty high. I don't have a temp gauge that has degrees(there's a way to monitor it on my LiveWire, I'm just not sure how yet) - but based on the outside temp here in Jax, FL (low 100's with humidity) and based on the fact that my engine temp gauge never moves past the middle - I would say you're having an overheating issue. Have you changed out your theromstat? Ever done a radiator/coolant system flush or vacuum? Oil + Filter change?
Click to expand...

Im not trying to be rude or anything but those damn fancy idiot lights ford put in as gauges are complete They always read in the middle even when they shouldnt.Ex:my volt gauge reads at the mid point all the time but my battery was pretty much gone...it read the volts were good...turned the car off and went into store for 10mins....come out and it was dead(on my old gt).Now with my real gauges installed the water temp varies a whole lot while driving around town and the stocker never moves.....
 

BennyBlown2v

New Member
Dec 9, 2004
1,233
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Carmel, INdiana
Jul 11, 2008
#7
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #7
+1 on the half water/half water wetter. You shouldn't need any antifreeze since you live in the damn desert lol.
 

Stark77

Member
Jun 11, 2008
501
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Tallahassee, FL
Jul 11, 2008
#8
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #8
half water/half water wetter? I've never heard of this? It may reach below 32 degrees here in jacksonville for two or three nights per year. What would be the benefits of me using the water/water wetter as opposed to straight coolant?
 

BennyBlown2v

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Dec 9, 2004
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Carmel, INdiana
Jul 11, 2008
#9
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #9
Stark77 said:
half water/half water wetter? I've never heard of this? It may reach below 32 degrees here in jacksonville for two or three nights per year. What would be the benefits of me using the water/water wetter as opposed to straight coolant?
Click to expand...

Water wetter is a product which increases the thermal efficiency of water. The original poster lives in climate that doens't freeze..so he needs no antifreeze. The benefit would be is it keeps your car cooler...that's the point of this thread right?

Red Line Oil: Coolants and Others
 

bhuff30

Founding Member
Dec 11, 2001
6,037
35
129
Olathe KS
Jul 11, 2008
#10
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #10
210 really isn't that hot. That's likely the point where the fans turn on, which is why it never goes above 210. Long as the temps cool down when the fans kick on, you are fine. After all, that's why you have a fan.
It certainly wouldn't hurt to flush the cooling system, but I bet you'd get better results from washing the radiator/condensor so it flows air as it should.
 

Mustang5L5

That is…until I whipped out my Bissell
Mod Dude
Feb 18, 2001
43,145
17,839
224
Massachusetts
Jul 11, 2008
#11
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #11
BennyBlown2v said:
Water wetter is a product which increases the thermal efficiency of water. The original poster lives in climate that doens't freeze..so he needs no antifreeze. The benefit would be is it keeps your car cooler...that's the point of this thread right?

Red Line Oil: Coolants and Others
Click to expand...


Water wetter actually reduces the surface tension of water allowing bettwe heat transfer. It works like dish soap does...but you don't want to fill your rad with dish soap.


Coolant does act as a lubricant and does protect against corrosion. It's not as good at cooling a car as straight water is.

If i lived where it never froze, and was hot, i'd run a 75/25 mix of water to coolant or maybe even lower like 85/15 and add some water wetter.
 

BennyBlown2v

New Member
Dec 9, 2004
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Carmel, INdiana
Jul 11, 2008
#12
  • Jul 11, 2008
  • #12
Mustang5L5 said:
Water wetter actually reduces the surface tension of water allowing bettwe heat transfer. It works like dish soap does...but you don't want to fill your rad with dish soap.
Click to expand...

:Word:
 

the98stang

Active Member
Aug 12, 2005
2,408
0
47
Clovis, CA
Jul 12, 2008
#13
  • Jul 12, 2008
  • #13
My car has a brand new T-stat and the coolant was flushed about a year ago. I think it's just because it's so damn hot outside. On the other hand my FMIC covers a lot of my radiator, probably blocking the fins resulting in hotter coolant flow. Right now I'm running 75% water and 25% coolant.
 

eliteJAE

Member
May 29, 2007
0
1
16
Stanford University
Jul 12, 2008
#14
  • Jul 12, 2008
  • #14
as stated by others, 210 aint that bad i too live in the desert, and get outside temps of 112+, but I usually cycle through 190 degrees to 210, at which point my fan catches up and throws the temp back down.

At the moment, i'm running a 75/25 mix too, since it isnt gonna freeze anytime soon, thats ok. Although i do get freezing temps and way below during March-April.

you're not overheating it lol from personal experience, my car didn't fully overheat and have headgasket failure until 237 degrees F (114 C) i was lucky and my gasket failed before my heads did lol
 

Hardtop68

Founding Member
Aug 23, 1999
193
1
16
Wherever they need me
Jul 13, 2008
#15
  • Jul 13, 2008
  • #15
Get your tach to show the coolant temperature real time... I have done it and my car has gotten up to 108 celsius thats 226 degrees F with no problem at all... As Bobhyatt said... thats pressurized (twice the atmospheric pressure) and not vaporization will occur... warping will occur IF you add cold water to an overheated engine radiator and turn it on immediatelly...

Regarding the needle always staying at 50% scale, this is because the raw temperature signal from the sender is filtered (lagged) so the neddle does not moves a lot (similar to the raw RPM signal that jumps a lot when read from the tach diagnostics but the tach needle is not so jumpy.) Engine will have to actually start overheating to the needle to start to go up.
 
B

BobHyatt

New Member
Aug 7, 2007
378
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0
Jul 13, 2008
#16
  • Jul 13, 2008
  • #16
BennyBlown2v said:
+1 on the half water/half water wetter. You shouldn't need any antifreeze since you live in the damn desert lol.
Click to expand...

Actually you need it there just as much. The air box gets _cold_ around the evaporator core, and the heater core is right in there. You could potentially freeze the heater core prior to the motor warming up given the right conditions. And your water pump needs lubricant, which the antifreeze provides. pure water will cause the bearing/seal to fail pretty quickly.
 

billfisher

Active Member
Jul 17, 2005
1,296
4
38
huntsville, AL
Jul 13, 2008
#17
  • Jul 13, 2008
  • #17
get soem real gauges and read it.

but water wetter is originally from racing(nascar) and works wonders.

you only need enough anti-freeze to prevent freezing.


+1 on the wetter and water .
 

62thunderbird

New Member
Jul 2, 2008
31
0
0
Nor Cal
Jul 13, 2008
#18
  • Jul 13, 2008
  • #18
My 97 with my 200 Gt motor over heated when I was working on it. The car when I bought it the temp gauge worked for a while but after I bought it the guage never went up to normal temp and so I never new what it was really running. What happened is that the guy who put my motor in used a bad thermostat and used house water plubming pipe for the thermostat sensor out let were the sensor goes into. That was the main problem but it sounds like you might want to flush your radiator and could use Royal Purple purple ice radiator additive that works the same as wetter water. Could be the water pump might not be working properly?
 
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