tjZ06
Active Member
- First Name
- TJ
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2021
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 30
- Reaction score
- 48
- Location
- Palo Alto, CA
- Vehicle(s)
- '03 JGC Overland 4.7 HO, '18 JGC Trackhawk 6.2 SC
- Occupation
- Tech
Yes, but it's a closed system so the longer some coolant stays in the radiator to cool off, the longer other coolant is staying in the engine and taking in more heat. It's sort of a zero-sum game.The thermostat also controls the amount of time the coolant is in the radiator to cool off
Newton's Law of Cooling states that you want the biggest heat differential between the coolant and the ambient air for the most effective cooling (that's a gross over-simplification, but sort of the net-net). Obviously we can't control ambient temp, so you kind of want the coolant entering the radiator as hot as possible... so slowing coolant down sounds good. But again, it's a closed system so that means the coolant going back into the engine is that much cooler, so even though it gains more heat with the increased time in the engine, the net-temp coming out would be about the same. In other words, to a reasonable extent coolant flow isn't super important. Too fast and it'll cavitate in places and become inefficient, too slow and it will reach unacceptable temps while in the engine (even thought the coolant in the radiator might be fine). It's generally accepted you want it flowing as fast as possible, before creating cavitation.
-TJ
Sponsored