97 6cyl, factory radiator.
32RH with temp gauge & aux cooler in front of the radiator, plumbed after the OEM trans cooler.
Been running this setup for several years.
It's been cold in TX this week, but last night was in the 50's and I still saw this odd behavior so it's time for a thread. First, my engine has always run with the temp needle on the "1" in 210. Off OBDII it's always between 210-212F. Transmission temp fluxuates a little more based on the outside temp, but it's always between 140-160F, never over 170, but also never has any problem warming up.
Starting this week it is not really even getting to the "2" in 210, but I don't have my reader handy to get the actual temp. The gauge is reading noticeably cooler and the heater seems to work fine. Sure it could be a gauge problem. But at the same time my transmission temp is staying very cool. I've driven multiple 30 minute stints this week, including letting it just idle for 15 minutes after a decent length drive. The gauge won't read below 100F, but for the first 10 min it won't even move. I have yet to drive it long enough to get it over 115F. And when it did get to 115F, the act of driving it cooled it back down to 110F. Sure it could be the transmission temp gauge.
So either both of my gauges went weird at the same time, or I have a different cooling problem. The jeep running cooler could just be a stuck-open t-stat, easy enough to fix. I replaced it with a 195 when I got it back in 2020 and I'm sure I used a cheap part so maybe it failed. But the trans temp is weird. I've driven in colder temps in prior winters and while the trans ran cool, it was still in the 130-140F range. This is just really really really cool for a thing that normally runs 60 degrees warmer.
It's too cold for me to work (I'm soft, I won't apologize) so it'll be a couple weeks before I replace the thermostat. But there is no reason why that would affect the trans temp in such a huge way.
32RH with temp gauge & aux cooler in front of the radiator, plumbed after the OEM trans cooler.
Been running this setup for several years.
It's been cold in TX this week, but last night was in the 50's and I still saw this odd behavior so it's time for a thread. First, my engine has always run with the temp needle on the "1" in 210. Off OBDII it's always between 210-212F. Transmission temp fluxuates a little more based on the outside temp, but it's always between 140-160F, never over 170, but also never has any problem warming up.
Starting this week it is not really even getting to the "2" in 210, but I don't have my reader handy to get the actual temp. The gauge is reading noticeably cooler and the heater seems to work fine. Sure it could be a gauge problem. But at the same time my transmission temp is staying very cool. I've driven multiple 30 minute stints this week, including letting it just idle for 15 minutes after a decent length drive. The gauge won't read below 100F, but for the first 10 min it won't even move. I have yet to drive it long enough to get it over 115F. And when it did get to 115F, the act of driving it cooled it back down to 110F. Sure it could be the transmission temp gauge.
So either both of my gauges went weird at the same time, or I have a different cooling problem. The jeep running cooler could just be a stuck-open t-stat, easy enough to fix. I replaced it with a 195 when I got it back in 2020 and I'm sure I used a cheap part so maybe it failed. But the trans temp is weird. I've driven in colder temps in prior winters and while the trans ran cool, it was still in the 130-140F range. This is just really really really cool for a thing that normally runs 60 degrees warmer.
It's too cold for me to work (I'm soft, I won't apologize) so it'll be a couple weeks before I replace the thermostat. But there is no reason why that would affect the trans temp in such a huge way.
