Thermostat Bypass?

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

Joined
May 25, 2008
Threads
3
Messages
56
Location
Oz
Heyya guys,

hope all are well.
I had a question about a bypass hose I have on the thermostat housing, seems to allow the coolant to bypass the thermostat. I'm in the middle of winter here and I only have a short run to work and the poor thing never gets off the cold mark.
I was thinking about blocking it off but I thought I should check for opinions first.
I couldn't find an explanation of why it was there in the manual and I did a search and came up with no clear reason for it.

What's it for?
 
Not as cold as the winters most people have to put up with, never (very rarely) gets below freezing.
By the time I get to work the temp gauge has moved about 1mm off the bottom of the gauge. Takes about 10-15minutes to get to work, mostly 80kmph.
I get the feeling if I block off this hose the engine will warm up quicker and be better for it.
 
Sign me BT, DT on this one.

I tried various things with this on a Ford that I had that also took a long ways to get warm.
Blocking it off is not a good idea. Allowing a little flow keeps the h2o pump from cavitating, which would start to erode the pump vanes. Then it wouldn't cool so well when hot either........
On the Ford I made up a way to jet the by-pass so that I could see if reducing the flow made a difference, and how much of a change in restriction had how much of an effect.

The end result of all of that testing was no change in the by-pass at all and a piece of cardboard in front of the warmest 1/3 of the radiator (cross flow type) during the cold months.
 
I don't see above freezing temps as reason enough for drastic warming measures to be taken. IF this is a cruiser motor, then perhaps the bypass hose isn't the problem. The o-ring inside the t-stat housing, on top of the t-stat; If it's torn, improperly installed, etc, it will allow nearly full bypass of the t-stat. This will cause over-cooling and the only fix is to get a properly installed o-ring back in there.
 
I don't see above freezing temps as reason enough for drastic warming measures to be taken. IF this is a cruiser motor, then perhaps the bypass hose isn't the problem. The o-ring inside the t-stat housing, on top of the t-stat; If it's torn, improperly installed, etc, it will allow nearly full bypass of the t-stat. This will cause over-cooling and the only fix is to get a properly installed o-ring back in there.
x2...
 
x3. The rig should heat right up w/in 2 miles. It is likely a deteriorated O-ring that is not seated in the thermostat housing.
Replace the thermostat and O-ring together.
 
Thanks for that guys, I'll check the thermostat and o-ring.
Good point that blocking the bypass might harm the pump.
 
check the gaskets and o ring as others said... then take a longer trip to work. Its not good to start and run an engine when it never gets up to operating temp and then shut it off, espically on a routine basis. The engine needs to get to operating temp and stay there for a little bit before shutting it down.
 
yeah, i know it aint the best thats why im looking for fixes and why I was wondering if anyone knew exactly why the bypass is there.
It should warm up well before i get to work.
10-15 minutes drive at 2000revs. It should wam up by halfway.
 
I bet your o ring is gone..., you might consider replacing the thermostat when you check that.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom