My 2014 JK Rubicon with 50K miles was throwing off a check engine/malfunctioning thermo code. I am having it replaced and the shop is telling me factory recommended 203 degree thermostat installation. Why so hot? Shouldn't it be 180 degrees?
My 2014 JK Rubicon with 50K miles was throwing off a check engine/malfunctioning thermo code. I am having it replaced and the shop is telling me factory recommended 203 degree thermostat installation. Why so hot? Shouldn't it be 180 degrees?
My 2014 JK Rubicon with 50K miles was throwing off a check engine/malfunctioning thermo code. I am having it replaced and the shop is telling me factory recommended 203 degree thermostat installation. Why so hot? Shouldn't it be 180 degrees?
My 2014 JK Rubicon with 50K miles was throwing off a check engine/malfunctioning thermo code. I am having it replaced and the shop is telling me factory recommended 203 degree thermostat installation. Why so hot? Shouldn't it be 180 degrees?
Why "should it be" 180°?
Engines are designed to run at a particular temperature, balancing latent heat, compression, efficiency, etc. OEM is 203° and is what I would stick with. Lower temperature thermostats only regulate the MINIMUM operating temperature, not the maximum anyways.
Why "should it be" 180°?
Engines are designed to run at a particular temperature, balancing latent heat, compression, efficiency, etc. OEM is 203° and is what I would stick with. Lower temperature thermostats only regulate the MINIMUM operating temperature, not the maximum anyways.
I should have said seems like it should, not should. I have a GM 3.6L in another vehicle and it runs consitently at 183 degrees after it warms to 180. So I was making presumptions about 3.6L V6 engines and not sure why one would need to run hotter than another.
Big difference between a GM and Chrysler Engines.
You think the Jeeps have alot of problems you should see how bad the newer Dodge diesel trucks are.
I should have said seems like it should, not should. I have a GM 3.6L in another vehicle and it runs consitently at 183 degrees after it warms to 180. So I was making presumptions about 3.6L V6 engines and not sure why one would need to run hotter than another.
I run a 160 degree t-stat in my Corvette. But that's a forged/heads/cam/blower LS3 making about 850 HP.
I should have said seems like it should, not should. I have a GM 3.6L in another vehicle and it runs consitently at 183 degrees after it warms to 180. So I was making presumptions about 3.6L V6 engines and not sure why one would need to run hotter than another.