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Well upper rad hose doesn't have flow when thermostat is closed, right..............
So squeezing it closed when thermostat is open would be the same as thermostat closed, there would be no changes, no pressure build up
Open Thermostat and upper rad hose are just an easier path for coolant to flow than heater hose, so some of the coolant goes that way, some goes thru heater hose, more does when thermostat is closed
Some always flows back to block
Early 2.8's had the thermostat in the lower water inlet, not in the upper outlet like most everything else. If you ran flush chemicals through it, make sure you pulled the block drains and got it all out or you'll end up with corrosion problems. I've seen a few of the bi-metal gauges fail but the constant voltage regulator failed way more often. If the CVR is the problem, the gas gauge will also read high. I'd also look closely at the radiator cooling fins, if they're dirty or corroded the radiator's ability to cool is reduced dramatically.
And you would use a 180degF thermostat on lower hose, even 170degF would be OK
Upper hose used 190-195degF thermostats
A lower hose thermostat should be rated 15deg lower than upper hose/engine desired temp
Yes, the radiator provides 15 to 20degF of cooling, and that's also the difference between upper and lower engine coolant temp
And best operating temp is with coolant at 190-195degF at upper engine, from SAE study
So when lower engine coolant is at 180deg upper is at 190-195deg and radiator should start to be used
So yes, check the box or part number of the last thermostat installed, should be max. 180deg
The 2.8l did have hot spots in the heads, just a design flow goof, so 170deg certainly wouldn't hurt in Tenn.![]()
Wouldn't hurt but the jiggle valve/hole is to let air out which wouldn't be an issue with lower thermostat like it is with upper
Water/coolant will flow down in rad and engine side to lower thermostat displacing any air because upper hose and rad cap is open to let air out
With upper hose thermostat the water/coolant flows down into lower rad hose to fill engine side but air gets trapped in upper engine because thermostat is closed so air can't get out, jiggle valve/hole lets air out, or pulling off 1 heater hose(or both) from fire wall, lets air out faster, lol