I'm sure that was fired at me Chubbs878 and not you. Please read my response above.
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In the spirit of open-mindedness, I did entertain the notion of keeping my system stock and replacing the LR 180 I had with this BMW housing and one of their 180 deg stats. Mark, you should try one of these to lower the temps further. eBay has Tstats in a variety of temp ratings starting at 160 which was the factory model.
Funnily enough the lowering of operating temps for V8 D2's has been a high priority for D2's pretty much all round the world,,, :angel:;)
just that in OZ ( and we obviously followed England, who'd a thunk?? ) we used factory parts,, who knows why we didnt look at Nth America?? all our parts manuals tell us you're there-- ;)
your way of lowering temps is new to us.. :D
Sorry, but I don't think that the current system is some special design - However only the project engineers could truly confirm any of our theories.
Car manufacturers no longer listen to engineers - nor do most executives of major companies in Australia or elsewhere. They are only sales driven and bonus driven. Their only motivation is the great human motivator " what's in it for me", and so sales and marketing trump function and longevity.In this case, the fundamental emphasis was to provide faster heater matrix warm up, which they probaly garnered from a customer survey.
The engineers then had to come up with a compromise solution. This is the cooling system we have in the Discovery and P38.
I can just imagine the engineers complaining, but being sarcastically howled down by the executives. The engineers parting words would have been " this decision will come back to haunt you in poor reliability".
The poor engineer would have been told to go elsewhere if he didn't like the decision from the "design team".
I'm with the Texas camp on this one. It's simple and it works.
Could I ask chubs878 to post some pictures please and some part numbers for hoses, thermostat housing etc so I can follow suit. I'll be changing over ASAP.
I intended to do so yesterday but was discouraged as the compatibility of the mobile website and the iPhone doesn't allow me to post more than 1 photo with a post. I will have something for you guys by tomorrow. Furthermore, I have already improved upon the modification as seen in the US instructions but have yet to do it myself, so you guys will be the first to utilize the new and improved.
There have been a couple of threads that I found on the inline setup dating back to 2012, but when LR came out with the 180-deg "soft spring" Tstat, everyone ditched the inline-tstat mod in favor of this which required no modification. When engines were still failing enthusiasts discovered with the help of their aftermarket temperature gauges that the thermostats weren't running a whole lot cooler than the factory stat, and the 20-degree spikes were still present. Even their 180 stat runs at 190 and spikes almost to 210 with the AC running so back to the inline-mod they went. And furiously for the past 6-12 months as we now have substantial data dating back several YEARS to our forefather's efforts and conquests of which to confirm the validity and benefits of running the inline stat. I will tell you guys what I told another member just this morning who said he was comfortable with his Disco (also in TX) operating at 210 and spiking to 218F with the AC on, in traffic, because he has over 200K miles and no issues to date. And that is my truck which I bought a year ago, started ticking/tapping a couple weeks later so I asked the PO what was going on. His statement to me was that "all Discos have a tick and that's what they are famous for." I knew the tick was something which was being caused by something. I started searching forums and the first thing I found was the factory temp gauge doesn't work. That made sense as I had the water pump go out on me the 2nd week of ownership and I saw steam before the needle on the gauge cluster ever moved! Next I put my OBD with live data readout to it and immediately saw 218F at idle. That's when I replaced everything including the thermostat (with LR180) and flushed the DexCool in favor of generic green ethylene antifreeze. I was then experiencing operating temps of 194-200F. The "tick/tap" noise was gone and has yet to return. I became obsessed with lower operating temps on this truck right then and there, especially having read numerous stories of slipping cylinder liners and the block cracking behind the liners, inbetween the bores and around the head bolt threads. We also found that other members who had the same tapping sound resolved that issue by lowering the operating temps and so it has become an epidemic. I still don't know what was making the noise at higher temps. Could it have been the cylinder/cylinderS liners moving? Possibly. That's seems to be the general consensus. But the point is that if the temps are low enough, the cylinder liners never get the change to move or loosen inside the overheated and expanded cylinder bore, thereby preventing serious issues and catastrophic failure.
Mate, thanks for taking the time to post up the info.
2 questions with the lower temps
1. Has anyone noticed any loss of engine efficiency (fuel economy/slightly rough running etc) and 2. Why didnt you like Dexcool given that the gaskets in the D2 are not affected by it like early GM V6 motors were and where Dexcool has a very high boiling point (ie just in case a component fails or there is sudden coolant loss etc it gives a margin of safety)?
Cheers
You have to think, not every Discovery owner is an enthusiast. You are living in a fantasy world having the benefit of this knowledge. How many millions of soccer moms just got in the thing to go for years. There are even board members out there who are STILL referencing the factory temp gauge. I had to tell a guy the other day to stop doing that. I wasn't referring to myself in that post so you are preaching to the choir. I was just saying that there have been millions of people using that gauge who don't know any better, even today after all of the info that is out there on the web and word of mouth. That gauge has led to more problems.... Everyone out there isn't aware of the quirk. They just assume it operates like the temp gauge in every other car that they've ever owned. "Hmmmm steam??! Why is my gauge still in the middle at normal??" Must be something else so I suppose it will make it to the house." PSYCHE! Many a Disco has ended up in a scrap-heap from this exact scenario. Been there, done that. Luckily I had the sense to pull over and cut it off then do some research. Most people don't care that much. They aren't going to join a forum and spend hours reading others rants and opinions on the Internet. They drop it off at a repair garage, pay the bill, and drive it again until it really does **** the bed. I mean just the fact that you have to find this information and even invest in an aftermarket gauge to monitor engine temps should be substantial enough that LR called a bulletin and replaced the sending unit, reprogram the ECU to correlate temps on a sliding scale. And then you want to waste your time posting a response to me about your Scangauge?! Cmon dude. Unbelievable. You obviously don't even get what this whole thread is based on so don't even worry about it.