So true. On current fuel injected computer controlled engines the computer starts the fan and if thats not enough starts resetting timing and fuel mixtures to maintain a pretty constant temperature. The old mechanical fan switch in the radiator compared to a modern computer controlled engine has a pretty large range between the temperature at which it cycles the fan on and off again with the set points shifting as the parts start to wear out.TX82FIAT wrote:This is a good reminder to flush the coolant on my cars in particular the Spider
It is funny how blurry the line can be on a Spider having an overheating issue or not. Add to this that cars made over the last 20 years rarely stray from the perfect operating temperature "on the gauge" once they are warmed up. For example you know the modern day car is running hot as you sit at a stop light and the fan cycles on and off and you pick up on the slight change in engine operation/idle. However, the temp gauge never moves. On our cars the needle looks like it moves quickly and between 188 and 205. We already know they can have overheating issues and nobody wants to blow a head gasket. Again, something that rarely happens on modern cars. So...we sit in traffic and look at the temp gauge. Even the most confident of Fiat spider owners looks at the temp gauge for that remote possibility that today, despite our best efforts, could be the day she overheats.
Will today be the day it fails? I put in an override switch that I can flip on when the days are hot and I want a little more cool down after the fan cycles off along with an adjustable external fan thermostat.
Less than $20 at Advance Auto Parts:
http://shop.advanceautoparts.com/p/impe ... hermostat#