crazykid1994
Senior Member
A port is fluid leaving the transmission. B port is fluid returning to the transmission.
A port goes into the thermostat area
A port goes into the thermostat area
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Just a rough drawing for concept.
View attachment 235485
So what you have in mind would fit the inside diameter of the larger upper ( DistalThat's what I intend to do, just slightly differently. Rather than fit the diameter of the bore closely, my goal is to close it off at the face which appears to be how the factory thermostat does it.
That's what I intend to do, just slightly differently. Rather than fit the diameter of the bore closely, my goal is to close it off at the face which appears to be how the factory thermostat does it.
If you do not remove the thermostat and it stays blocking flow from going to the radiator it would have nowhere to go if you blocked the heater as well.One of my concerns was fluid flow of the cooler became blocked but it appears that there's no accounting for that from the factory either.
From what I can ascertain, the smaller spring is there to absorb 'overtravel' from the thermostat which would otherwise put extreme pressure on the plastic cap/plug. Seems I need to add a spring to my plan between the cap and my part to keep everything in place and sealed off.
I'm also curious for those who have tapped/plugged those heater ports, how fluid would flow of they had not also removed the thermostat or if it would at all.
If you do not remove the thermostat and it stays blocking flow from going to the radiator it would have nowhere to go if you blocked the heater as well.
There should not be a clog in this setup. The filter should catch any sediment before being pumped through the radiator or heater. The only clog I could see is if something from the thermostat got jammed which would force fluid through either the heater or the radiator. I would rather not have it stuck going through the heater as that would lead to extremely high trans temps.Right, so there's no other bypass in the event of a clog somewhere.
You have some sort of direct link into my mind. Both side load and direct pressure on that end cap was something I worry about. An upside down top hat in the lower bore would help. However, that involves more machining. Seems simpler to just bottom out into the lower bore.I'd thought about that idea to,but i still think you might want a step on the bottom under the sealing base to lock it into place.The plastic cap isn't an overly strong piece,and i'd be worried that lateral loads on a pin that long,might be determental to the life expectancy of the plastic end plug,and if it cracks or breaks in the middle of nowhere,you're basically hooped,and i don't know if that plastic endplug is a servicable piece if you do crack it.you might have to buy the whole assembly just to get the endplug.That's of course if you're going to use the original plastic cap,i don't think it'd be an issue with a brass endcap like the Rev Max kit uses though,but that's defeating the purpose of trying to do it relatively cheaply
Although if the sealing washer is a fairly snug tolarence fit in the bore,then lateral loads might not be an issue
I wouldn't expect a problem either, but it was something I thought of. Figured if there was a factory provision for it I didn't want to eliminate it.
Given that a lot of people have short drives and the trans takes a bit to warm up I doubt many people get much higher. Not to include that older vehicles did not have a trans warmer and maintained low trans oil temps as well. I know the zf is a completely different setup. However, The cars do not include a oil warmer and would maintain low temps as well. Do I think an aftermarket bypass thermostat, like the HD trucks have, would be great in place of the stock thermostat housing unit with heater? Yes I do. That would be the best option and I would jump right on that boat if someone offered one. 160° would be great in my opinion. I do not think an aftermarket replacement thermostat to replace the stock thermostat will really do much given the thermostat does not fully block the heater from flowing and will continue to heat fluid beyond 160°. I do have to argue that a lot of people are nervous about the low temps. I have never experienced shifting issues in my truck at low temps when the truck is first started. And actually on that 12 hour drive my truck seemed to be more responsive on shifting. It shifted faster and when passing on the highway would drop right into gear and go. At 185° or 190° I always felt like it hesitated briefly when fully warmed up before down shifting.Man those 120 numbers kinda scare me! Almost sounds TOO low.
In our cold weather Im not sure the trans temp would even get that high for me.
Given that a lot of people have short drives and the trans takes a bit to warm up I doubt many people get much higher. Not to include that older vehicles did not have a trans warmer and maintained low trans oil temps as well. I know the zf is a completely different setup. However, The cars do not include a oil warmer and would maintain low temps as well. Do I think an aftermarket bypass thermostat, like the HD trucks have, would be great in place of the stock thermostat housing unit with heater? Yes I do. That would be the best option and I would jump right on that boat if someone offered one. 160° would be great in my opinion. I do not think an aftermarket replacement thermostat to replace the stock thermostat will really do much given the thermostat does not fully block the heater from flowing and will continue to heat fluid beyond 160°. I do have to argue that a lot of people are nervous about the low temps. I have never experienced shifting issues in my truck at low temps when the truck is first started. And actually on that 12 hour drive my truck seemed to be more responsive on shifting. It shifted faster and when passing on the highway would drop right into gear and go. At 185° or 190° I always felt like it hesitated briefly when fully warmed up before down shifting.
Edit: speaking of which. Now that I’m thinking about it I really do wish someone would make a bypass style replacement for our trucks to replace the whole assembly. I’m seeing most dodge cars run 165-175° unless running a cooler bypass. BMW runs 195°-205° trans temps on their zf trans. The only thing I’m seeing with research on the fluid is expansion and viscosity change but the zf viscosity is designed to not change drastically from cold to OT. However it does expand quite a bit.
Given that a lot of people have short drives and the trans takes a bit to warm up I doubt many people get much higher. Not to include that older vehicles did not have a trans warmer and maintained low trans oil temps as well. I know the zf is a completely different setup. However, The cars do not include a oil warmer and would maintain low temps as well. Do I think an aftermarket bypass thermostat, like the HD trucks have, would be great in place of the stock thermostat housing unit with heater? Yes I do. That would be the best option and I would jump right on that boat if someone offered one. 160° would be great in my opinion. I do not think an aftermarket replacement thermostat to replace the stock thermostat will really do much given the thermostat does not fully block the heater from flowing and will continue to heat fluid beyond 160°. I do have to argue that a lot of people are nervous about the low temps. I have never experienced shifting issues in my truck at low temps when the truck is first started. And actually on that 12 hour drive my truck seemed to be more responsive on shifting. It shifted faster and when passing on the highway would drop right into gear and go. At 185° or 190° I always felt like it hesitated briefly when fully warmed up before down shifting.
Edit: speaking of which. Now that I’m thinking about it I really do wish someone would make a bypass style replacement for our trucks to replace the whole assembly. I’m seeing most dodge cars run 165-175° unless running a cooler bypass. BMW runs 195°-205° trans temps on their zf trans. The only thing I’m seeing with research on the fluid is expansion and viscosity change but the zf viscosity is designed to not change drastically from cold to OT. However it does expand quite a bit.