ericw.
Well-Known Member
lol a big meanie.You meanie!
I have to keep JSCAN up and trigger the fan for long drives with my plow on the front if I don't want to freeze to death in the cabin.
Because the outside temp sensor is up front, and the plow creates a low pressure area just ahead of the grill, hot engine bay air is pulled forward over that temp sensor.
I've seen snow on the ground on 101 degree days! Well, according to my Jeep it was over 100 degrees, in reality it was about 0 degrees.
Most recently I was driving in 15 degrees and that sensor read 84
Now that wouldn't be a big deal except the HVAC uses that temperature reading, so it shuts your heat off and tries to give you fresh air inside. Last time my wife was with me and we had the plow in, she had a blanket over her legs and mittens on.
So I trigger the high speed fan to draw cold air across that sensor so we can have heat in the truck.
Engine temp climbs as well it typically peaks at about 230 or so, so I don't worry about that part.
That's an interesting problem to have and wouldn't expect in freezing temps.
I saw 265 once on the million dollar highway and pulled off to let it cool down. lolIn my JK I saw as high as 265* for short spans climbing highway hills near Moab, and I was in a 2 door and wasn't towing anything. These little fellas can make some HEAT in the right conditions.
I didn't know that was a known strategy. I just sort of figured it out after so many long painful drives with an overloaded pentastar.Unrelated but forever ago when I was taught to drive I was always taught to anticipate hills (when you can see them) and speed up a bit prior to hitting the climb to avoid momentum loss. Seems like you're in the same camp. Decades later and I'm still doing this, but I've noticed lots of other drivers just step on it a bit more and send their RPM's to the roof.
Just cool to hear it from someone else, anywho, carry on!
I got pretty good at it on our last trip, to where it was almost just happening on instinct. If my trips were longer or I was a full-time overlander, I imagine the 3.6 could suffice if I established that driving style as my normal but... going home and driving my other cars makes me wonder why I'm dealing with it. lol
The other side that worries me is that, my wife isn't a car person. She's not a tech person. She very... simple
So here I am slow building a diesel.
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