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On Jun 30, 7:34*pm, "Mike Slater" wrote:
I am not trying to stir anything up by asking this question, but because the water cooling passages are by design so narrow in the vicinity of the thermostat on my 1995 Merc 60hp 2-stroke Bigfoot, and small debris was constantly lodging itself on the waterpump/impeller side of the thermostat I decided to just run without it. *I have been doing it for two seasons now. I measured the water temperature at the powerhead with a laser unit at about 90 degrees. *I am getting ready to advise that my neighbor do the same thing and I just wanted to hear some comments first. *What will it hurt? Mike Probably not, but one thing that you need to remember mike, is that the engine does have a recomended operating temperature. and the thermostat helps hold the water int he engine jacket so that the proper temp can be achieved. And by running without the thermostat, it can actually change your performance. also without it, you could have a cyl or so running actually too warm and others too cold. or one side of the engine running hotter than the other thusly doing wierd things to the cylinder bore over time. Not counting getting all that muck lodged up into the cylinder jacket. I dont' know. it might not hurt or change a thing, but it was put there for a reason. Maybe the thermostat is better at use when running in extremely cold temps. |
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