94 XJ Running hot running out of things to check

sberrett

NAXJA Forum User
Location
Los Angeles
My 94 XJ with 250k is having some overheating issues that I cant narrow down and I'm about to throw in the towel and take it in to my mechanic.

Running around town the temp is fine and stays between 195-210f. Highway speeds is defintely hotter than i'd like to be at, and any kind of hill climb makes the temp gauge shoot up to the last mark below the red. At that point turning the heater on full blast will usually settle it back down to the 240f area. I live in Southern California so those of you that live here know the hwy climbs I'm talking about. I5 North going up Castaic, or I5 South Grapevine, but it's not just those, it's any kind of incline that starts making the temp skyrocket. This has been a problem for awhile. Add summer temps into the mix and it's just constantly running way too hot even on flat highways.

My setup
RE 3.5 lift, and 32's on stock gearing.
CSF Radiator (2670), Flowkooler, 195 tstat
New hoses (they arent collapsing)
New ZJ clutch fan from Napa
I've flushed the system and completely burped the system of air
I've tried 50/50 and 30/70 distilled water to concentrate mixtures
Efan is fine
And the mechanical fan shroud is intact.

The last thing I did this weekend was attempt to change the temp sending unit on the engine block out with a new one (Mopar) and now it seems to be reading at a higher temp than it used to. The dash gauge is now saying it's idling at 210, and will get up to 225ish at which point the efan will kick on. I've taken temp gun readings at the tstat housing and at the rear of the block where the sending unit is and it checks out to what the gauge is displaying. It sounds like the old sending unit was bad and this one is reading closer to what i'm really at.

At this point i'm wondering if I have a cracked head, or a bad head gasket, but i'm not seeing the obvious signs. My Jeep mechanic made the suggestion that it could be my gearing, but I don't really agree with that since it's ran hot even before I modded it years ago.

Any thoughts on what else I can do?
 
No one really knows why these piles overheat. I own 4 XJ's and I've run the gamut on this whole over heating issue. I think I've read every thread imaginable on the internet, and no one has a concrete answer, as in "this is why these XJ's overheat." Many theories, but nothing concrete.

And when I say I've changed everything, I mean everything. I've tried CSF, Champion, American Eagle, Spectra premium, Champion BC1193, custom built radiator from Bryce Thomas radiators, Cold Case radiators, Hesco water pumps, stock pumps, high flow T-stat housing, changing Cats and muffler, by passing the heater control valve, ZJ fan clutch, by passing the heater core, blah, blah, blah.

Here's what I've found. Take it with a grain of salt.

High flow water pump vs stock. No difference.
High flow T-stat vs stock. No difference.
CSF radiators. Sucked.
Champion Radiator. Just okay.
American Eagle radiator. Worked great, but Champion no longer makes that one. Also leaked after a few years.
Cold Case. Just okay. Didn't work as well as the American Eagle in my 97.
Custom Bryce Thomas radiator for my 95, not that good.
Champion BC1193. Works good in my 99.
Spectra premium. Works great in my son's 99. But this rig is bone stock. The 3 others have similar lifts, lockers, and builds.
ZJ fan clutch. Sucked, and was too close to any radiator except stock. I just use stock fan clutches always now.
Most of the other mods I did. Don't have any evidence they helped one way or another.

What I did is put a manual e-fan controller in the 3 trails rigs, and I just keep the temps down by using the e-fan sooner than it would turn on by itself.

My scientist brother in law thinks it is an air flow problem. It seems to work fine for me with the e-fan always running. I'm also in So-Cal, so in cooler desert weather off road, I don't have to use the e-fan as much. Hotter weather out in the desert, I can use the A/C as much as I'd like. On the freeway and in town, almost no issues with over heating. But they are mostly dedicated trails rigs, and only see pavement to and from off roading spots. Only my son's bone stock 99 is a daily driver. I'm thinking my BIL is right on the air flow situation.

I think there are 3 main problems with the cooling system.
1. The radiator is not tall enough. Even stock, it is probably at the max of it's cooling capacity. Not much you can do about that. If you look at all the Wranglers and such, they all have the same 4.0, but a much taller radiator. They don't seem to have nearly the cooling issues of XJ's.
2. There must be some passages in the block or head that are too narrow and susceptible to constriction from corrosion. Flushing and maintaining maybe will help.
3. I think the heater core is more problematic than people think. I think a clogged heater core contributes to over heating. I'm not sure, but a clogged heater core seems to maybe put a back pressure on the inlet side of the heater hose. I'm not sure about this, but some testing has made me think this is a possibility. When I by passed the heater core on my 99, I had better performance. Unfortunately, I changed to the BC1193 radiator at the same time. Also, a corroded heater core can send bits of debris into your radiator, causing it to clog up.

Here's what I would do.
1. I'd get rid of that CSF radiator and get a Spectra premium. Many have reported great success with the Spectra premium. Second choice would be a BC1193 from Champion Radiators. But they are pricey.
2. I'd thoroughly chemically flush out your cooling system. There's many threads on how to do this and what products to use.
3. If your XJ is old, and the cooling system has not been maintained well, then you heater core is probably hosed. I would bypass it, and change it if you need or want a heater. Do not try and flush it IMO. You can't properly clean it, and it's just going to spit out debris into your radiator. Change it or bypass it, but don't flush it and expect it to be as good as new. Everyone tries to flush it because it's a PITA to change. This has been my experience.
4. Add a manual e-fan switch.
5. Use a 50/50 mixture of coolant with distilled water only!. Don't let anyone tell you that a weaker 70/30 mix is fine. It is not fine and you will get premature corrosion. People have reported that water-less coolant works well, too. I don't have any experience with that.

Anyway, that is my experience and advice. YMMV. I just chose to put up with it and mitigate it with and manual e-fan controller. Hope that helps.
 
With the manual switch be careful to wire it so that the automatic on function works when the switch is turned to the off position.
 
I wouldn't discount the airflow idea. I own a '75 Bricklin. Going to one of the National meets and other travels, I noticed that at 55 mph, the temps remained OK. Going above that, the temps would rise a bit. When I slowed back down, then it took the temps a while to go down. I talked to one of the Gurus on Bricklins. Didn't write it off, just who has the equipment to test that stuff. A few years latter he was selling an upgraded chin scoop. Also, another owner added a trans cooler.
 
Yall…. I just had this same problem. Everyone ALWAYS overlooks this…. And when I tell you I spent money son.. I went from stock everything cooling wise (the jeep is very modified, running big tires but axles etc)

And ima let yall in on this lil secret.

If everything is new and great and lovely and stock, the stock system cools as intended, as they get older and mileage stacks up… there is something everyone (including me) overlooks…

THE GODA** TRANSMISSION.

The transmission flows hot fluid through the radiator. When the trans is high mileage or old fluid bad lines low pressure wtc, that trans gets WICKED hot…. You’re essentially sending molten fluid through your rad….


I ran everything differnt t stat, 3 different rads, 4 seperate fan setups, even a new head and gasket.., was still running up to 220 when pulling hills or off-roading….

Installed a Hayden the dawg cooler in front of the rad, ran the trans fluid into it, and THEN back into the radiator… my temp NEVER reaches 205 now, in fact it stays at 195-196 98% of the time now.

I only thought of this as I had pulled my carpet out of the jeep and was wearing sandals on my way to work, and my ankle was ON FIRE. These transmissions get super hot.

For reference I’m on 37’s with 5.13’s and d44/d44 axles. Jeep has 113k miles. It’s a 99.


GUYS. FIX YOUR TRANSMISSION COOLERS AND ITLL KEEP YOUR TEMPS WAY DOWN.

THANK ME LATER ❤️🤙🫡
 
Yall…. I just had this same problem. Everyone ALWAYS overlooks this…. And when I tell you I spent money son.. I went from stock everything cooling wise (the jeep is very modified, running big tires but axles etc)

And ima let yall in on this lil secret.

If everything is new and great and lovely and stock, the stock system cools as intended, as they get older and mileage stacks up… there is something everyone (including me) overlooks…

THE GODA** TRANSMISSION.

The transmission flows hot fluid through the radiator. When the trans is high mileage or old fluid bad lines low pressure wtc, that trans gets WICKED hot…. You’re essentially sending molten fluid through your rad….


I ran everything differnt t stat, 3 different rads, 4 seperate fan setups, even a new head and gasket.., was still running up to 220 when pulling hills or off-roading….

Installed a Hayden the dawg cooler in front of the rad, ran the trans fluid into it, and THEN back into the radiator… my temp NEVER reaches 205 now, in fact it stays at 195-196 98% of the time now.

I only thought of this as I had pulled my carpet out of the jeep and was wearing sandals on my way to work, and my ankle was ON FIRE. These transmissions get super hot.

For reference I’m on 37’s with 5.13’s and d44/d44 axles. Jeep has 113k miles. It’s a 99.


GUYS. FIX YOUR TRANSMISSION COOLERS AND ITLL KEEP YOUR TEMPS WAY DOWN.

THANK ME LATER ❤️🤙🫡
This could be a key point.

I don't have the overheating issues. And I don't have an automatic transmission.

Taking the trans cooler out of the radiator would be a worthwhile test.
 
The guy in this post tried a bunch of things and I offered some other ideas also, maybe something there is worth trying.

The trans cooler and airflow both make a lot of sense.
 
Flowkoolers work well, or they did when I had one years ago until the fins wore off. I use the normal 50\50 with tap water and a cheap two aluminum radiator that's probably 20 years old. I do have a stick, and also a built 4.1, balanced, ported and milled 11-1 HO head, Hesco water pump and cam, bored T-body, Mopar header, 2.5 inch exhaust pushing a heavy beast on 35's and 4.11's It only needs the e-fan with multiple red lights at 90 degrees, or climbing in 4-lo at 11k feet. It's quite quick for what it is and cruises easily at 80 mh.20230506_124054.jpg
 
The main issue is airflow. The XJ has no aerodynamics, causing engine heat to remain in the compartment. Consider installing the hood's louvers or a spacer to raise the hood by an inch.
 
The main issue is airflow. The XJ has no aerodynamics, causing engine heat to remain in the compartment. Consider installing the hood's louvers or a spacer to raise the hood by an inch.
I put in louvers and it helped tremendously. I would say about a 5+ degree reduction in everyday traffic (my stock '88 XJ) and more out on the freeway when I go to Texas from S.F.
There's been a lot of talk here about Trams coolers - don't they block the radiator flow, and, would one of those heat sink type coolers, with their low profile, be better in not blocking the rad?
Thoughts? Thanks.
 
I put in louvers and it helped tremendously. I would say about a 5+ degree reduction in everyday traffic (my stock '88 XJ) and more out on the freeway when I go to Texas from S.F.
There's been a lot of talk here about Trams coolers - don't they block the radiator flow, and, would one of those heat sink type coolers, with their low profile, be better in not blocking the rad?
Thoughts? Thanks.
I purchased a dual radiator for both power steering and transmission, along with a fan, and I'm installing it in a location other than in front of the radiator and condenser.
 
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