Hink
Overkill Is Underrated
Right, I measured it at various places, temp sender at radiator, top of radiator on both sides, head at temp sender. I settled on the front of the drivers head on the brass sender itself because I figured that it was the closest to where it was actually picking up the signal to send to the gauge.Not sure how good IR guns are today but different surfaces will have different emissivity. Not sure I would argue 5-10 degree difference in IR gun readings depending on different surface emissivity
While working at NAPA for many years, many years ago they had (and still do, I believe) a line of thermostats called the superstat. They were a progressively opening stat where the lower line would be an only open/only closed type. I don't think the superstat was anything special, I think factory stats are all progressive but the lower line were just crappier.A 195F stat might open at 194-196? in a switch like fashion
I'm just a shade tree mechanic, not an automotive engineer but the way I understood it is that it shouldn't control, but it will influence. By starting to open 15* sooner (along with the fan clutch engaging 15* sooner), the 180* stat will allow the radiator to start shedding heat sooner. If I'm towing and don't want to go above 210* and I hit the 195ish range for the stock stat, I only have that 15* swing before I'm in trouble. You'll roll through that 15* real dang fast when you're pouring that much more fuel to it. Starting the cooling cycle (stat open, fan clutch engaged) stops the runaway heat (well, to a point anyway).The thermostat is not suppose to influence or control the max temperature at all.