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Don't know if the engine will run too cool, but do know that you will have
absolutely no heat. Now, in the summer this isn't a problem, but can cause
some discomfort in the winter. I found this out on my 124 Fiat that I had at
college. My wife and I were really strapped for money at school, and the car
kept overheating when driving around town. After talking with my dad (there
was no way I could afford a new thermostat) I performed "surgery" on my
thermostat (a big screwdriver and a hammer), since the valve had stuck shut.
Well, this solved my overheating problem, but on my way to Phoenix, AZ from
Provo, UT, we were passing through some mountain passes about 1 in the
morning in mid-December. I have never been so cold in all my life. The car
ran fine, but I might as well have been driving with the windows down.
Guess it depends on when you plan on driving the car...
Bryan 
bdstinocher@sewsus.com  
502-782-7397 xt. 2284
        ----Original Message-----
        From:   Coday Family [SMTP:coday@localaccess.com]
        Sent:   Thursday, August 13, 1998 11:57 PM
        To:     triumphs@autox.team.net
        Subject:        No thermostat?
        So what happens if you take the thermostat out altogether?  Will the
        engine run too cool?
        Has anyone tried the high performance Chevy 350 thermostat?  
        I have had the TR3 out every day since it fired up and got rolling
on 
        Saturday.  It overheats if I don't keep it moving, tends to blow a 
        bit of coolant.  I am thinking of adding a coolant recovery tank,
but 
        there's not a lot of room under the bonnet. Anyone found a good
place 
        in the engine compartment for a coolant recovery tank?
        Thanks for all the great advice,
        Geezer, Buffy and the twins
        59 TR3 TS52320 (a daily driver wannabe) 
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