Nick, It is most likely that you have a partially pugged radiator. Also, the modern thermostats are of the "pop-up valve" type. Older versions were a "butterfly valve" style and when open would allow a greater flow of water through. I see new ones ocassionally at swap meets. I had an interesting situation once where the engine suddenly began overheating at speeds above 50 MPH. This was a 65 Dodge with a 383. After trying the usual fixes and ruling out the radiator, I found that the waterpump was at fault. It had an impeller that was plastic, with internal splines that mate to the shaft and were mostly stripped. At low RPM, the impeller would turn, and at higher RPM it would slip. Dave Homstad 56 Dodge D500 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- At 12:59 PM 5/18/99 -0400, you wrote: >Hello all. > >On another note, i will start working on my running warm at an idle problem >next week. >One person suggested first I check to see that the car is actually running >warm. >With the guage at 3/4 towards max, the collant temp (by sticking a >thermometer in the radiator" was 200 degrees. So I think it's safe to assume >that when the guage it at max, the car is overheating. The first thing I'm >going to do is attempt to remove the thermostat. > > >Thanks, >Nick > Dave |