Hummer Forums by Elcova  
Forums - Home
Source Decals

Source Motors
Custom. Accessories.

H2 Accessories
H3 Accessories
Other Vehicles

H2 Source

H2 Member Photos
H2 Owners Map
H2 Classifieds
H2 Photo Gallery
SUT Photo Gallery
H2 Details

H2 Club

Chapters
Application

H3 Source

H3 Member Photos
H3 Classifieds
H3 Photo Gallery
H3 Owners Map
H3 Details
H3T Concept

H1 Source

H1 Member Photos
H1 Classifieds
H1 Photo Gallery
H1 Details

General Info

Hummer Dealers
Contact
Advertise

Sponsored Ads










 


Source Motors - custom. accessories.


Go Back   Hummer Forums by Elcova > Hummer H2 Discussion Forums > Technical Discussion and Customizing your H2

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #23  
Old 07-20-2006, 08:22 PM
tomp's Avatar
tomp tomp is offline
Hummer Authority
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 1,795
tomp is an unknown quantity at this point
Default Re: Water Wetter

While you guys are right if there are overheating problems, this is not the case for my rig which operates right around 195 degrees F and I am in Texas heat.

(I have tires same as stock etc...)

It does not get any hotter when towing boat or RV.

I am pretty sure that if I did something to lower the temps by 10 degrees that the thermostat would close at that point.

My tranny on the other hand, seems to get hot. Temps climb on my tranny when towing or just when facing high winds. I intend on adding one of those PML tranny pans with extra fluid capacity first to see if that helps.

The first two things I would try if I was having minor engine heat issues (and everything was working), is syn oil and water wetter. Syn oil dropped the temps on my air cooled Harley by 20 degrees.
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 07-20-2006, 09:01 PM
Beastmaster's Avatar
Beastmaster Beastmaster is offline
Hummer Expert
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 605
Beastmaster is off the scale
Default Re: Water Wetter

Quote:
Originally Posted by tomp
Your thermostat is ultimately going to determine the temps.

As Paragon said - not really.

The thermostat will open roughly at a pre-set temp, but once it's open, it stays open. And once it's open, if the heat continues to go up, the thermostats have nothing to do with it.

So - if the thermostat is set for 180 degrees, they will open and stay open, even if the coolant is boiling out and it's at 280 degrees.

Also - Messing with the thermostats is not something that is recommended in today's strange emission controlled vehicles.

The vehicle has to get up to the optimium operating temp in as fast as possible to reduce greenhouse gases. The thermostats are designed to help with that.

The issue really at hand is how well the vehicle cooling system transfers heat away from the coolant to the open air. I have some doubts about that in an arid desert environment combined with the H3 design.
__________________
1997.5 HMC4 Hummer H1 w/Slantback shell (Mine)
2006 Hummer H3 Adv. Package (Wife's)
M101A2 Trailer
Reply With Quote
  #25  
Old 07-20-2006, 09:38 PM
tomp's Avatar
tomp tomp is offline
Hummer Authority
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 1,795
tomp is an unknown quantity at this point
Default Re: Water Wetter

Okay, I give in. I must be a mongoloid or similar
Reply With Quote
  #26  
Old 07-20-2006, 10:30 PM
PARAGON's Avatar
PARAGON PARAGON is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 24,247
PARAGON has a little shameless behaviour in the past
Default Re: Water Wetter

Quote:
Originally Posted by Beastmaster
As Paragon said - not really.

The thermostat will open roughly at a pre-set temp, but once it's open, it stays open. And once it's open, if the heat continues to go up, the thermostats have nothing to do with it.

So - if the thermostat is set for 180 degrees, they will open and stay open, even if the coolant is boiling out and it's at 280 degrees.

Also - Messing with the thermostats is not something that is recommended in today's strange emission controlled vehicles.

The vehicle has to get up to the optimium operating temp in as fast as possible to reduce greenhouse gases. The thermostats are designed to help with that.

The issue really at hand is how well the vehicle cooling system transfers heat away from the coolant to the open air. I have some doubts about that in an arid desert environment combined with the H3 design.
tstats are notoriously the restriction in the coolant flow in the cycle. All vehicles taken as a whole, needs them to do exactly what they do. Get the engine temps to a certain operating temp as quickly as possible then fuhgetabowdit.

But, in situations, like yours, where every little thing might matter, maybe removing the most restrictive part of the system would improve cooling. It's just like removing a pinch from a water hose. Of course, that's sort of a band aid fix.

There has to be a bigger reason.
Reply With Quote
  #27  
Old 07-20-2006, 11:05 PM
vip808 vip808 is offline
Hummer Veteran
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 214
vip808 is off the scale
Default Re: Water Wetter

i don't know if this is true or not but a NAPA and Goodyear salesmen told me not to use (Purple Ice) a similar product because they said that the H2 needs to run hotter for the engine to work properly the way the manufacture intended. Since the two guys told me the same thing i just took their word for it.
Reply With Quote
  #28  
Old 04-10-2007, 03:56 AM
MONSTERMATT MONSTERMATT is offline
Hummer Expert
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: MARYLAND
Posts: 779
MONSTERMATT is an unknown quantity at this point
Default Re: Water Wetter

Quote:
Originally Posted by vip808
i don't know if this is true or not but a NAPA and Goodyear salesmen told me not to use (Purple Ice) a similar product because they said that the H2 needs to run hotter for the engine to work properly the way the manufacture intended. Since the two guys told me the same thing i just took their word for it.
wtf????
Reply With Quote
  #29  
Old 04-10-2007, 05:04 PM
mdoyle mdoyle is offline
Hummer Professional
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 373
mdoyle is on a distinguished road
Default Re: Water Wetter

Quote:
Originally Posted by MONSTERMATT
wtf????

That might seem like a mistake but is probably right, consider the internal clearances, tolerances, oil gallery flow paths, expansion rate for cylinder head to block interface, and any other number of factors will result in a design temperature point.

If you go adding a wiz-bang cooling system that makes the motor run 25?C cooler, you'll gain volumetric efficiency but could cause increased wear.
Reply With Quote
  #30  
Old 04-11-2007, 09:36 AM
HUMMERcustoms.com/TAZ's Avatar
HUMMERcustoms.com/TAZ HUMMERcustoms.com/TAZ is offline
Hummer Authority
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Little Rock, Arkansas
Posts: 1,784
HUMMERcustoms.com/TAZ is off the scale
Default Re: Water Wetter

I did not read everything below to see if this had been mentioned.

One of the main reasons a tstat is in a vehicle is to maintain a balance temp around all cylinders and primarily from front to back cylinders or vice versa depending on start and finish position of water flow. In the newer highly computerized rides this is an important factor in fuel/air mix by computer and also complete combustion in each cyl.

That being said the computer has a range that it in can operate in. If you are doing your own tuning then the cooling issue becomes more easily handled since you are monitoring each cyl. and can tell the computer what You are wanting it to mix in air/fuel. You also are able to handle combustion by even running cooler or hotter plugs in different cyl. and even use hotter firing coil packs on each cyl. and well many other things to get a balance of combustion on all cylinders.

Depending on use especially towing and adding more HP as well torque it is important to have all the cooling you can get. I would like to be able to maintain a 160 degree temp all the time which is not doable. From what input I can get this temp is as low an ambient that computer would like to have the coolant at that would still let computer manage fuel/air above and below. Again tuning yourself allows for more flexibility. I have 160 degree tstat as well as the throttle body water line bypassed and even in winter in middle of country I have yet to reach that low of an operating temp. My dual electric fans are set at lowest setting which is 180. In a hot lap type of run situation I could wire a bypass so the fans run all the time but, it is not recommended by the motor manufactuers to do it for a lengthy period as motors need to cycle to help cool them.

I know this is not likely needed to be mentioned but, equal temps result in more equal combustion at each cylinder. This hopefully gives us more power and equalized torque on the crank down the full length.

Hope this is helpful.

TAZ
__________________
05 H2 SUV cus. paint, Magnuson SC 6/12lb boost, cowl hood scoop, 12" dash touchscreen, GM elec. fans, HPTuners.com tuning soft., Dynatech headers dual catback exhaust Jet Hot chrome front to back Flowmaster Super 40's, Diamo 8 Karat rims & 325X60-20" Toyo, 4 OEM Captain seats Katzkins leather, rear console computer inside running all AV/NAV etc., Infinity component system 3 amps Tsunami Caps, rear flip down 12" monitor, headrest monitors, overhead console boost, fuel pressure, & A/F ratio gauges
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:02 AM.


Powered by vBulletin Version 3.0.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.