mynameisowen wrote:007 wrote:that aside, coolant cannot flow through both radiators until it is at the point where the thermostat valve is rated to open. let's say that point is 80*C. because of you turning your heater on, let's say coolant is at 60*C. the thermostat won't open at all and only the mini radiator will be active. until you reach 80*C, all the engine cooling will be done by the mini radiator.
if your thermostat is stuck open like you suspect, then you should see similar results even with the heater off. if turning the heater off is restoring the situation back to normal, then your thermostat is fine.
If thermostat is stuck open then I am receiving more cooling than I need. Engine warming up properly depends on outside temperature and air flow rate through radiator. During winter and on motorways more cooling is experienced, thermostat should then stay closed. If it stays open then cooling system will not work as required. Honda will have designed this system to be able to warm cabin even though it is cold outside. Priority is warming the engine for me so I have heating off till warmed, if I turn heating on engine never warms up. Once warm and I turn heating on engine temp usually drops but that depends on air temp and vehicle speed. This should not happen. If engine is warm and I turn heating on thermostat should then close to keep engine at operating temp. Thermostat must be not closing: replace thermostat.
Do you not agree? I value your input.
I agree that *if* the thermostat is stuck open, the engine will run colder than it is supposed to. what I am trying to say is that at this point, you don't know for sure whether or not the thermostat is stuck open. you need to diagnose and confirm your suspicion before you throw new parts on the problem.
to do so, drive around with the heater off and see if engine temperature is still low. keep in mind that it will not rise as quickly as it does in summer because your engine will also lose heat through the block and head metal and colder ambient temperatures will cause more heat loss through the metal than usual.
here is what I would recommend:
1. idle the car with heater turned off. monitor the radiator top and bottom hose temperature by feeling them. when the thermostat is closed, the top hose will be hot and the bottom hose completely cold. when the temperature needle is near its usual steady state position, the thermostat will open and the bottom hose will warm up. if that happens, your thermostat is just fine. measure the amount of time it takes for the bottom hose to warm up for a completely cold engine.
2. repeat the above with the heater on and measure the amount of time. note the difference.
if the bottom hose starts to warm up way before the steady state mark, *then* you have a problem with it. take out the thermostat and check it as described in the service manual here:
http://blackworks.in/cars/resources/tstat/tstat.png
archyman wrote:It is normal not to turn the heater untill the engine reches working temperature. But when that happens and you put on the heater, the temp should not drop much if the termostat is ok. If it drops to zero point then you know its the termostat and you have to change it.
the heater has a very significant effect on engine temperature. I have personally faced many problems with thermostat valves that are jammed shut of radiator fans that don't turn on, causing the engine to overheat until the temperature needle shoots up all the way to the top. in this pinch,
turning on the heater at full blast gets the temperature down almost immediately.
check Point #2 under "If you need to drive the car" here:
http://www.wikihow.com/Stop-an-Engine-from-Overheating
Use the heater to disperse engine heat. Flip the climate controls to vent, turn the heater all the way up, and turn the fan all the way up. If the weather is hot, the inside of the car will heat up quite a lot. Point the vents out the windows as much as possible to help reduce the temperature.
conclusion: the interior heater takes away a *significant* amount of heat from the engine. keep that factor in mind.