I think where some issues may come into effect is the term open and fully open. Many thermostats "fully" open 15 to 20 degrees higher than their rated temperature. As Mr Woodhouse pointed out, a lower temperature thermostat in itself will not magically make the vehicle run cooler but it is part of the entire cooling process in a street driven car that is tracked. As he pointed out in the Comp Coupes, thermostats were locked in the open position so they could not fail, but were left in place to create some flow restriction. Most cars will actually overheat if the thermostat is completely removed because the water flows too quick through the radiator at higher rpms. IMO, it is easier to set up a full on race car since you know your operating rpm range, the ability to manipulate air flow through the radiator and the average MPH speeds you'll be competing at. Without a lot of testing, it really is a crap shoot to believe that in a street driven Viper that the thermostat is fully wide open in all track conditions when you have to account for coolant flow in gpm, rpms, air flow, mph and ambient temps. This is before we even rate the stock thermostat to know what it does at specific temperatures, how fast it opens fully and how fast it closes based on temps.
This quote explains what I'm trying to convey best:
"The key to low-temp thermostat success is that coolant is allowed to flow more freely during low load sections of the racetrack, ensuring that the radiator is able to keep the engine within the optimal temperature range in the high-load sections of the track. So if you’re maxing out your cooling system at the racetrack and experiencing some overheating issues, for example, a low-temp thermostat will often solve this problem by letting the radiator work more at part-throttle lower engine loads and in the process delay or completely eliminate any overheating during wide-open throttle high-engine loads."
The thermostat is only part of the equation since everything must work in unison. I don't look at the thermostat as temperature control but more flow control that lets the radiator and air flow regulate and dissipate the BTU's created by the car. The challenge is most of us have street driven Vipers and we have to work around the PCM, stop and go driving, emissions, wear, etc. Even if the lower temp thermostat gives you only a 5% cooling advantage on the track, we still talking 12 degrees lower temps if you're regularly hitting 240 degrees. If my Viper is at 228 degrees, I'm not real concerned but once the temps hit 240, I start looking at the temp gauge more than the track, lol.
For the price of lower temp thermostat, it really is worth the experiment to see if it helps.
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