Remote Thermostat kit.
Remote Thermostat kit.
Am thinking about buying one from eliseparts at £130. Any difference in these.? Anyone reccomend somewhere cheaper? Can someone fit it for me (for beer or other negotiable payment)??
What year is your car Tom?
I have the landie PRRT kit still to fit. I have got a plan for an old cooling system layout but not the new one. Not too bad to fit by the looks of things, but then again I havent done it yet.
What difference did it make Shug?
I have the landie PRRT kit still to fit. I have got a plan for an old cooling system layout but not the new one. Not too bad to fit by the looks of things, but then again I havent done it yet.
What difference did it make Shug?
1994 Lotus Esprit S4 - Work in progress
1980 Porsche 924 Turbo - Funky Interior Spec
2004 Smart Roadster Coupe - Hers
1980 Porsche 924 Turbo - Funky Interior Spec
2004 Smart Roadster Coupe - Hers
1. More gradual warmup, takes a bit longer to get to temp.RICHARDHUMBLE wrote: What difference did it make Shug?
2. When heat-cycling the car to bleed the system, we noticed that it opens very gradually and the engine's water jacket seems to see more gradual temp changes. The bypass is of much bigger diameter and it seems to mix the hot and cold more effectively, so you don't get those shots of cold coolant into the engine when the stat opens.
This is all gauged totally non-scientifically - just feeling the heat off various pipes round the engine....
2010 Honda VFR1200F
1990 Honda VFR400 NC30
2000 Honda VTR1000 SP1
2000 Kawasaki ZX-7R
1990 Honda VFR400 NC30
2000 Honda VTR1000 SP1
2000 Kawasaki ZX-7R
Same thing
The PRRT bit simply refers to the actual thermostat that comes with the Land Rover kit (Pressure Relief Remote Thermostat). The only way to get it (in a form you can use) is to buy the LR kit.
May take some persuading the parts monkey at LR that it exists, but persevere, it does and it's an upgrade for the Freelander.
On a later car, like yours, it's actually not bad at all. Just a bit of pipe cutting (not the car's pipes, so it's totally reversible) and finding a bit of ally pipe (I nicked a bit out of an old Rover 214 that was heading for the scrapper)
It's harder to explain in words than it is to do.
The PRRT bit simply refers to the actual thermostat that comes with the Land Rover kit (Pressure Relief Remote Thermostat). The only way to get it (in a form you can use) is to buy the LR kit.
May take some persuading the parts monkey at LR that it exists, but persevere, it does and it's an upgrade for the Freelander.
On a later car, like yours, it's actually not bad at all. Just a bit of pipe cutting (not the car's pipes, so it's totally reversible) and finding a bit of ally pipe (I nicked a bit out of an old Rover 214 that was heading for the scrapper)
It's harder to explain in words than it is to do.
Last edited by Shug on Mon Jun 05, 2006 2:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
2010 Honda VFR1200F
1990 Honda VFR400 NC30
2000 Honda VTR1000 SP1
2000 Kawasaki ZX-7R
1990 Honda VFR400 NC30
2000 Honda VTR1000 SP1
2000 Kawasaki ZX-7R
Make sure you refill with the same coolant - older cars have blue mono-ethylene glycol anti-freeze which also contains a short-lived corrosion inhibitor apparently (~2years) - (Lucas seems to be the supplier of suitable concentrated coolant) while newer cars have brown/orange OAT (Organic Acid Technology) which uses a longer lived corrosion inhibitor.
You're meant to stick to whichever type you already have and although it is said that you shouldn't mix them, the main reason not to is just that adding the austrian wine type to OAT reduces the effectiveness of the corrosion inhibitor (the reverse isn't true).
If you're doing a complete flush and refill, you could now fill up with OAT, even on an older car.
For what it's worth, I ran on 50% pyrenean stream water, 50% generic-blue-coolant for about 18 months after Stelvio 2004
Cheers,
Robin
You're meant to stick to whichever type you already have and although it is said that you shouldn't mix them, the main reason not to is just that adding the austrian wine type to OAT reduces the effectiveness of the corrosion inhibitor (the reverse isn't true).
If you're doing a complete flush and refill, you could now fill up with OAT, even on an older car.
For what it's worth, I ran on 50% pyrenean stream water, 50% generic-blue-coolant for about 18 months after Stelvio 2004
Cheers,
Robin