Reading what Stewart (a popular name in aftermarket water pumps) says about
thermostats:

A common misconception is that if coolant flows too quickly through the
system, that it will not have time to cool properly. However the cooling
system is a closed loop, so if you are keeping the coolant in the radiator
longer to allow it to cool, you are also allowing it to stay in the engine
longer, which increases coolant temperatures. Coolant in the engine will
actually boil away from critical heat areas within the cooling system if not
forced through the cooling system at a sufficiently high velocity. This
situation is a common cause of so-called "hot spots", which can lead to
failures.

Years ago, cars used low pressure radiator caps with upright-style
radiators. At high RPM, the water pump pressure would overcome the radiator
cap's rating and force coolant out, resulting in an overheated engine. Many
enthusiasts mistakenly believed that these situations were caused because
the coolant was flowing through the radiator so quickly, that it did not
have time to cool. Using restrictors or slowing water pump speed prevented
the coolant from being forced out, and allowed the engine to run cooler.
However, cars built in the past thirty years have used cross flow radiators
that position the radiator cap on the low pressure (suction) side of the
system. This type of system does not subject the radiator cap to pressure
from the water pump, so it benefits from maximizing coolant flow, not
restricting it.

Dale McIntosh


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