To the OP, think of this as a temperature thing, not an atmospheric pressure thing. Yes, water boils at a lower temperature at altitude, and at sea level at a nice 100 Celsius. Your motor does not care where you are.
The mechanical thermostat does not care where you are. It is made to run and function at a predetermined temperature at which point it opens up and controls the flow as previously described by MrBlaine. With that said, using the altitude logic, the fan should not be running all the time period.
Running without the thermostat will only ruin your motor in the long run as you will be driving it under load without optimal operating temperature controls.
I have driven Jeeps in the Caribbean at sea level and at close to .8km above sea level. No issues running the motor with the stock thermostat and cooling system. When it's hot enough it does what it needs to do.
The mechanical thermostat does not care where you are. It is made to run and function at a predetermined temperature at which point it opens up and controls the flow as previously described by MrBlaine. With that said, using the altitude logic, the fan should not be running all the time period.
Running without the thermostat will only ruin your motor in the long run as you will be driving it under load without optimal operating temperature controls.
I have driven Jeeps in the Caribbean at sea level and at close to .8km above sea level. No issues running the motor with the stock thermostat and cooling system. When it's hot enough it does what it needs to do.
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