Intentional Wanderer
Observer
The verdict - so far - from the guys at Falconworks in Tucson was...
... a bizarre thermostat failure. Turns out that this particular thermostat has a "safety" mechanism (that none of the mechanics, nor I, had ever seen). On the spring side of the thermostat, there is a small catch flange that acts to keep the thrermostat open fully (which it was when we pulled it) in case of overheating. A nice little mechanical wonder, if you ask me.
So, the thermostat shut (i.e. went bad)... the mechanism, sensing it was over its alloted temp range, popped back into the "fully open and locked" state. The only thing that could stop this from functioning properly would be if something jammed into the spring/mechanism to physically keep it closed.
...as to the stock Disco radiator, with 14 years and 128,000 miles, it looks almost brand new on the inside (well, what you could see after pulling the plug and using a borescope). We ran a flow test and it was 10% off of the factory new rates - Not bad for 14 years of gunk in the engine water spaces.
... a bizarre thermostat failure. Turns out that this particular thermostat has a "safety" mechanism (that none of the mechanics, nor I, had ever seen). On the spring side of the thermostat, there is a small catch flange that acts to keep the thrermostat open fully (which it was when we pulled it) in case of overheating. A nice little mechanical wonder, if you ask me.
So, the thermostat shut (i.e. went bad)... the mechanism, sensing it was over its alloted temp range, popped back into the "fully open and locked" state. The only thing that could stop this from functioning properly would be if something jammed into the spring/mechanism to physically keep it closed.
...as to the stock Disco radiator, with 14 years and 128,000 miles, it looks almost brand new on the inside (well, what you could see after pulling the plug and using a borescope). We ran a flow test and it was 10% off of the factory new rates - Not bad for 14 years of gunk in the engine water spaces.