Re: 1961 lark III question
jay merrill,
"Just out of curiosity, why is removing a thermostat such a terrible thing to do - assuming, of course, that the motor is not being used somewhere with water that is cold enough to cool the motor too much."
I didn't say removing the thermostat, I said removing the thermostat and all the guts, meaning the thermostat housing and relief valve below that.
Understanding the system will explain why: That motor has a recirculating cooling system where the water pump supplies water to the powerhead through the "up" tube. The water circulates in the powerhead and absorbs heat, then is presented to the thermostat. If the 'stat says it is warm enough, it opens and the water is discharged and replaced with cool water from the pump.
However, if the water is not warm enough, the 'stat remains closed and the increased pressure ahead of it forces the relief valve off it's seat and the water goes back down through the second pipe to the water pump, where the pump recirculates it back up to the powerhead, going 'round and 'round until it gets warm enough to open the 'stat. The thermostat is constantly monitoring the temp and opening and closing as necessary to maintain the proper temp.
So, if the relief valve is missing, the water is free-flow back to the pump all the time, recirculating when it should be discharged and replaced with cool water, thus getting hotter and hotter.
AND there is another thing. If the relief valve is missing, exhaust can blow down the second pipe to the water pump also. It's a very effective water pump, but a lousy exhaust pump. The exhaust kills the pumping action.
Frank