baugustine
Member
I’m coming in late to this discussion and will avoid the negatives in the last few pages but will comment on the original topic.
I work on vehicles for a living, and have done OBD since 1993 so I have a working knowledge of both the software side and the repair/tuner side. With that background:
Lower temp thermostats were used in the OBDI and early OBDII systems by both tuners and DIY performance folks to pick up a few ponies without a ton of mods. It works on a TBI or PFI system only because the lower coolant temps will fool the calibration to think its not yet up to operating temp, which is 220-240F. It will add more fuel, period. (Yes, fuel mileage goes down, and yes long-term you will wash down the cylinder walls, and yes you will put more fuel in the cats). Unless you re-tune the motor, the negatives far outweigh the pros.
Fast-forward to GDI, and lowering coolant temps will amplify the cons, even with a tune. If the OEMs could run best-case scenarios (economy, emissions, power) at 180 they would but the engines are optimized at 220-240, which is why that is where they run them. Ask any owner of a Gen1 GDI (VW, Kia, GM) about the cylinder heads having to come off at 15,000 miles to be walnut blasted for carbon removal and you will see they are very different in nature.
In summary, this is not your fathers 3800 SFI Oldsmobile or your Uncles’s 5.0 Mustang and should not be tuned the same way. Save your $ for useful stuff like a bed extender or tonneau cover...
I work on vehicles for a living, and have done OBD since 1993 so I have a working knowledge of both the software side and the repair/tuner side. With that background:
Lower temp thermostats were used in the OBDI and early OBDII systems by both tuners and DIY performance folks to pick up a few ponies without a ton of mods. It works on a TBI or PFI system only because the lower coolant temps will fool the calibration to think its not yet up to operating temp, which is 220-240F. It will add more fuel, period. (Yes, fuel mileage goes down, and yes long-term you will wash down the cylinder walls, and yes you will put more fuel in the cats). Unless you re-tune the motor, the negatives far outweigh the pros.
Fast-forward to GDI, and lowering coolant temps will amplify the cons, even with a tune. If the OEMs could run best-case scenarios (economy, emissions, power) at 180 they would but the engines are optimized at 220-240, which is why that is where they run them. Ask any owner of a Gen1 GDI (VW, Kia, GM) about the cylinder heads having to come off at 15,000 miles to be walnut blasted for carbon removal and you will see they are very different in nature.
In summary, this is not your fathers 3800 SFI Oldsmobile or your Uncles’s 5.0 Mustang and should not be tuned the same way. Save your $ for useful stuff like a bed extender or tonneau cover...
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