I mentioned this a couple pages ago, and it was met with a “airflow is it the problem at highway speeds” speech. The idea that highway speeds Ram air through the radiator is not completely correct. The radiator support is an air dam, and trapping the air in front of it by having the upper and lower seal in place is the first step, like I said, without them it’s like sucking through a straw with a hole in it. But even with that, the air dam needs to have a vacuum to suck the air through the radiator, the more vacuum, the more air follows air through the radiator. It’s like pouring liquid through a funnel, dump the liquid in all at once, it just overflows, swirl the funnel and liquid creates a vortex that draws more fluid down the hole.Lower air dam in place..??
I can cruise around town all day long with the Superbird with zero issues. Hit the highway and the temperature actually rises because the air goes around the nose and not through it.
Now, onto the flow, the pump is moving liquid, so that’s not the problem, the thermostat opens at a certain temp, but it also closes at that temp or less, allowing liquid to stay in the radiator longer. People think because they run a 160 thermostat that their car should run 160, but that’s not the case. The motor runs in a certain temperature range, and putting too low of a thermostat in will just keep it open all the time, counteracting the idea of cooling the liquid longer in the radiator. But you can’t tell people that, they just don’t understand. Not saying this is the OP, but I see this question all the time.
So, @Kern Dog, is the upper and lower seal in place? Do you have a shroud and clutch fan? Are you running a 190 or 195 thermostat as they came from the factory? Is the lower hose collapsing? Is your cap a 16lb cap, and is it working? Don’t discount any aspect of the system because you don’t “think” it’s the problem, it all works together. Confirm that all items are in working order, and in place, process of elimination.