My well maintained 96 lx450 runs perfectly and does not overheat 99% of the time. But if pushed hard enough in the right circumstances it can get too hot and I am trying to find the most cost effective way to make my 1fzfe overheat proof.
I recently returned from a 4,300mile holiday driving aroung the western US (Co, Ut, Id, Mt, Ca) and the 450 was flawless and did everything I asked of it from bouncing down muddy trails in Montana and the Sierra Nevadas to cruising across the interstate as fast as reason and my radar detector would allow. On only 4 occasions did the truck disapoint; when the AC cut out over 3 passes. The pass that heated her the most was the I15 pass between Vagus and baker at 115 degrees outside with the AC cranked, 700lbs of family and gear, and cruising at over 80mph. I have a digital auxilary temp guage (from summit) plumbed into the upper radiator hose and it was registering between 205-215 degrees depending on terain before we got to the pass. As the 450 got farther up the pass so did the temp. I turned off the OD and let the tach climb to 3,700rpms. At 220 degrees on my guage the ac quit (yes i know it is suposed to do this at 226 degrees) and i continued to slow to keep the temp below 230 degrees. I had to stay between 55-65 mph and the AC kept itself off for about 20 min-not comming back on till we were over the pass and the temp had fallen below 220. Durring this pass incident the oem guage got to just below 3/4. I counted over 20 cars pulled off the road on this particular pass-probably all overheated.
I experienced similar ac cut out to a lesser extent on the way back over this same pass from Ca into Nevada and on the pass from Salmon Id into Montana and climbing into the Sierra Nevadas going to Shaver Lake from Fresno. In each of these situations it was hot outside, the AC was on, and the 450 was heavy and running hard.
This is the first time I have pushed my rig in such heat. This is the first time I have had the AC cut out. I believe my 450 is in top shape. I have had it for 2 years and 30,000 miles now. I have climbed this pass in the winter without a problem. I have climbed the 70 out of Denver on several occasions without a problem. But this is the first time I have climbed in real heat.
I would like to be able to climb passes using all 212 hp the 1fzfe has to offer. And I would like to do so in 120 degree heat with the AC on and 1000 lbs of gear aboard. AND I DONT WANT TO SLOW DOWN DEAR..."ITS MY TURN TO DRIVE AND I'LL GO AS FAST AS I WANT, WHEN ITS YOUR TURN YOU CAN DRIVE SLOWER".
So here are the options I have come up with:
1. huge auxillary oil cooler using a sandwhich adapter under the oil filter-possibly one with a fan
2. auxillary fan in front of radiator
3. Different radiator (this could get expensive)
4. listen to wife and slow down
In presenting this post I am assuming a healthy 1fzfe with a perfectly performing oem colling system can be overheated if pushed hard enough.
On another note I cant see how you guys with forced induction can possibly push your rigs hard for extended periods of time in the heat without overheating using the oem cooling system.
Any ideas?
I recently returned from a 4,300mile holiday driving aroung the western US (Co, Ut, Id, Mt, Ca) and the 450 was flawless and did everything I asked of it from bouncing down muddy trails in Montana and the Sierra Nevadas to cruising across the interstate as fast as reason and my radar detector would allow. On only 4 occasions did the truck disapoint; when the AC cut out over 3 passes. The pass that heated her the most was the I15 pass between Vagus and baker at 115 degrees outside with the AC cranked, 700lbs of family and gear, and cruising at over 80mph. I have a digital auxilary temp guage (from summit) plumbed into the upper radiator hose and it was registering between 205-215 degrees depending on terain before we got to the pass. As the 450 got farther up the pass so did the temp. I turned off the OD and let the tach climb to 3,700rpms. At 220 degrees on my guage the ac quit (yes i know it is suposed to do this at 226 degrees) and i continued to slow to keep the temp below 230 degrees. I had to stay between 55-65 mph and the AC kept itself off for about 20 min-not comming back on till we were over the pass and the temp had fallen below 220. Durring this pass incident the oem guage got to just below 3/4. I counted over 20 cars pulled off the road on this particular pass-probably all overheated.
I experienced similar ac cut out to a lesser extent on the way back over this same pass from Ca into Nevada and on the pass from Salmon Id into Montana and climbing into the Sierra Nevadas going to Shaver Lake from Fresno. In each of these situations it was hot outside, the AC was on, and the 450 was heavy and running hard.
This is the first time I have pushed my rig in such heat. This is the first time I have had the AC cut out. I believe my 450 is in top shape. I have had it for 2 years and 30,000 miles now. I have climbed this pass in the winter without a problem. I have climbed the 70 out of Denver on several occasions without a problem. But this is the first time I have climbed in real heat.
I would like to be able to climb passes using all 212 hp the 1fzfe has to offer. And I would like to do so in 120 degree heat with the AC on and 1000 lbs of gear aboard. AND I DONT WANT TO SLOW DOWN DEAR..."ITS MY TURN TO DRIVE AND I'LL GO AS FAST AS I WANT, WHEN ITS YOUR TURN YOU CAN DRIVE SLOWER".
So here are the options I have come up with:
1. huge auxillary oil cooler using a sandwhich adapter under the oil filter-possibly one with a fan
2. auxillary fan in front of radiator
3. Different radiator (this could get expensive)
4. listen to wife and slow down
In presenting this post I am assuming a healthy 1fzfe with a perfectly performing oem colling system can be overheated if pushed hard enough.
On another note I cant see how you guys with forced induction can possibly push your rigs hard for extended periods of time in the heat without overheating using the oem cooling system.
Any ideas?
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