I installed the t-stat last night, took all of about 10 minutes and two 13mm bolts to remove the water neck. I left the upper hose attached. A good amount of coolant drains out so have a catch pan. The t-stat pops out, the new one goes in, and you replace and tighten the two bolts. I topped off the radiator with water since its summer time. I started the truck and turned the heat on high, let it warm up in the driveway. It got no hotter than 181 degrees sitting in my driveway.
Took it for a cruise down the highway and it stayed about 186 degrees at 70 mph cruising speed. Before the truck would run between 205-210 degrees with the stock t-stat. My trans temp stayed in the 120's. Oil temp was just barely over 200 I think it was staying at 201 degrees.
An easy part to replace to keep your truck running cooler and help your trans live longer with cooler trans temps since the radiator also works inline with the tranny cooler.
Truck seems to not lose its off the line power like it did with the stock t-stat when it would get hot. I plan to add a tuner soon and hope the cooler temps will allow me to add more timing for more power.
Took it for a cruise down the highway and it stayed about 186 degrees at 70 mph cruising speed. Before the truck would run between 205-210 degrees with the stock t-stat. My trans temp stayed in the 120's. Oil temp was just barely over 200 I think it was staying at 201 degrees.
An easy part to replace to keep your truck running cooler and help your trans live longer with cooler trans temps since the radiator also works inline with the tranny cooler.
Truck seems to not lose its off the line power like it did with the stock t-stat when it would get hot. I plan to add a tuner soon and hope the cooler temps will allow me to add more timing for more power.