Paul Cotton
Well-Known Member
I have a 1965 Plymouth Belvedere II with a 440 engine. I am told the car was originally build for drag strip duty by a father and son. The son lost interest and the car was sold as is. The motor is a 440 and is quite healthy, while the transmission is a 727 with a cheater reverse valve body in it. The car is only driven on the street now and while it's capable of setting the tires on fire, it isn't driven that much or that hard.
It came with a transmission cooler mounted in front of the radiator which blocks a significant area of the radiator. I am fighting cooling issues and have changed thermostats, put an electric pusher fan on it and still it heats up.
My thinking is, the transmission cooler is blocking enough of the radiator that it's causing the engine to run hot.
My question is, is the transmission cooler really needed seeing how it's not on the drag strip and it's not driven hard when I take it out.
It came with a transmission cooler mounted in front of the radiator which blocks a significant area of the radiator. I am fighting cooling issues and have changed thermostats, put an electric pusher fan on it and still it heats up.
My thinking is, the transmission cooler is blocking enough of the radiator that it's causing the engine to run hot.
My question is, is the transmission cooler really needed seeing how it's not on the drag strip and it's not driven hard when I take it out.