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  #11  
Old 01-31-2016, 05:04 PM
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It's a myth that the heater hose needs to be looped back to the pump if your deleting the heater. I run both of our cars with ports completely blocked with no issue.
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  #12  
Old 01-31-2016, 05:15 PM
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It is not a myth and is how the thermostat is designed to operate from the factory. Every single LS equipped car used either a 4 port heater valve or in most cases no heater valve and instead air is diverted in the heater box.

That said the engine will run fine you just might see slightly warmer temps at idle. At higher RPM's the bypass in the thermostat opens so hot engine coolant will flow across the back of the thermostat even if the heater port is blocked.

I made a video about the difference I saw in thermostat behavior with and without flow through the heater hose port.

Edit. The video is long and boring but what you see is that with flow I get a normal cycle of the tsat but with it blocked my car idle temp is 207ish.


http://youtu.be/oxg4dICnCwc
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Last edited by Chad-1stGen; 01-31-2016 at 05:20 PM.
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  #13  
Old 02-01-2016, 02:46 AM
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Imo the only thing that your video shows is that your heater core is adding efficiency to your cooling system which is dropping the temps slightly. If your car does not stay at the temp of your thermostat your cooling system is lacking the proper efficiency in some fashion whether it be from airflow, water flow, or the size or efficiency of the radiator. The thermostat is nothing more than a bi-metal spring, it only knows temperature and opens and closes based on that.
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Old 02-02-2016, 01:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 71RS/SS396 View Post
Imo the only thing that your video shows is that your heater core is adding efficiency to your cooling system which is dropping the temps slightly. If your car does not stay at the temp of your thermostat your cooling system is lacking the proper efficiency in some fashion whether it be from airflow, water flow, or the size or efficiency of the radiator. The thermostat is nothing more than a bi-metal spring, it only knows temperature and opens and closes based on that.
You seriously think a vintage air heater core adds that amount of efficiency to an idling motor? A motor that runs under 200* in road course situations I might add. I get that this is a controversial topic. I did a lot of internet searches on it myself and came across tons of threads that seemed split down the middle between folks swearing it makes no difference and folks who saw a difference. I'm one of the ones that saw a difference.

The fact of the matter is that the LS thermostat is on the inlet/supply side and when the thermostat is closed and the heater ports are blocked there isn't any coolant flow across the side of the thermostat that senses temperature.

ETA: When I made that video it was after a radiator swap in which I changed the location of the steam vent from the heater hose return to the radiator. This is the whole reason I explored the issue because after the swap I saw a more pronounced difference in behavior at idle. I've since switched back to having the steam vent plumbed into the heater hose return and the difference in having the heater hose valve open or closed is less pronounced now because even when the heater core is closed there is still some coolant flow across the thermostat sensor from the 1/4" steam line.
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Last edited by Chad-1stGen; 02-02-2016 at 01:29 PM.
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  #15  
Old 02-07-2016, 09:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 71RS/SS396 View Post
It's a myth that the heater hose needs to be looped back to the pump if your deleting the heater. I run both of our cars with ports completely blocked with no issue.

X2

I build off road sand rails also and none of the engines that I do have any type of heater ports, either welded shut or drilled, tapped and plugged and never any issues
In the off road community, there are alot of quality engine builders/ suppliers (ie. CBM Motorsports, Turn Key, Redline, etc.) that practice the same method, even in their highend engines and sand rails (engines $20k+, sand rails $180k+)
I am sure that a stock application / system will produce less than acceptable results as compared to a custom aftermarket performance setup, like most of us run
http://www.custombuiltmotors.com/


Now back on topic for OP

I have had no issues running the VA heater valve in various installs
I have adopted the plumbing layout as done by Detroit Speed with regards to VA valve placement and converting the o-ring fittings to a "AN" style

here is a couple pics that I have saved and a video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=283BYw2f0Qc

Hope this helps

Jeff

Last edited by jwcarguy; 03-05-2017 at 01:23 PM.
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  #16  
Old 02-07-2016, 12:49 PM
Efi69Cam Efi69Cam is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jwcarguy View Post
X2

I build off road sand rails also and none of the engines that I do have any type of heater ports, either welded shut or drilled, tapped and plugged and never any issues
In the off road community, there are alot of quality engine builders/ suppliers (ie. CBM Motorsports, Turn Key, Redline, etc.) that practice the same method, even in their highend engines and sand rails (engines $20k+, sand rails $180k+)
I am sure that a stock application / system will produce less than acceptable results as compared to a custom aftermarket performance setup, like most of us run


Now back on topic for OP

I have had no issues running the VA heater valve in various installs
I have adopted the plumbing layout as done by Detroit Speed with regards to VA valve placement and converting the o-ring fittings to a "AN" style

here is a couple pics that I have saved and a video:


Hope this helps

Jeff
That looks really clean. Are the VA valves failure prone?
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  #17  
Old 09-28-2016, 11:02 AM
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96z28ss 96z28ss is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jwcarguy View Post
X2

I build off road sand rails also and none of the engines that I do have any type of heater ports, either welded shut or drilled, tapped and plugged and never any issues
In the off road community, there are alot of quality engine builders/ suppliers (ie. CBM Motorsports, Turn Key, Redline, etc.) that practice the same method, even in their highend engines and sand rails (engines $20k+, sand rails $180k+)
I am sure that a stock application / system will produce less than acceptable results as compared to a custom aftermarket performance setup, like most of us run
http://www.custombuiltmotors.com/


Now back on topic for OP

I have had no issues running the VA heater valve in various installs
I have adopted the plumbing layout as done by Detroit Speed with regards to VA valve placement and converting the o-ring fittings to a "AN" style

here is a couple pics that I have saved and a video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=283BYw2f0Qc

Hope this helps

Jeff
How did you convert the fitting to accept -an style fitting? Or did you just use a -an fitting? I can't find a male o-ring to male an fitting?
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  #18  
Old 09-28-2016, 11:28 AM
jwcarguy jwcarguy is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 96z28ss View Post
How did you convert the fitting to accept -an style fitting? Or did you just use a -an fitting? I can't find a male o-ring to male an fitting?
I used the o-ring to flare adapters
come in various sizes (ie -6AN to -10AN)

http://nostalgicac.com/fittings-hose...g-adapter.html

Here are a couple pics of plumbing layout on VA unit (one from DSE)

hope this helps
Jeff

Last edited by jwcarguy; 03-05-2017 at 01:14 PM.
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  #19  
Old 09-28-2016, 11:51 AM
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thanks! ordered
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