- Location
- Muskogee, OK
Thanks for the suggestion. I'll likely try another cheapie if my temp sender is working properly.
That is where my 96 temp gauge reads. Warms up till it touches the 210 mark then drops and holds as per your photo.
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Be a good idea to check if it is going into closed loop with a scanner. Open loop gobbles fuel. (Have you done the battery disconnect reset so it relearns?)
Any codes?
Also if the O2 sensor is weak/old it can mess with fuel milage, as can other FI parts.
Good Luck,
Orange
Ouch, 5 t-stats to get one that works? That would piss me off to no end.
Autozone t-stats are made in Israel (surprisingly not China)... have never seen one come back.
I have looked at the AZ Valu-craft, the Duralast, and the FailSafe... no noticeable/visual difference. But I went with the failsafe, as I know when the temps are back to 100+ this summer, I will likely get too hot again.
So far so good, went from running too cold in the winter to holding right at 205-210.
For reference, here is a pic of where my temp gauge normally resides:
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I haven't been able to work on the Jeep much because it got really cold and started snowing. I did change my oil (there is about to be another thread about my oil pressure gauge btw) but haven't had a chance to test my temp sender.
I did pick up a cheapie thermostat and gasket from autozone. My thermostat housing was leaking so I have to replace that anyway. I'll try to test the temp sender first though. I usually try to test one thing at a time so I can tell which step fixes it (hopefully).
Code 12 means battery was disconnected recently and can be ignored
Does the heater hose get hot to the touch? You might have air in the heater core, which could cause the thermostat housing to block up.
The hose that goes to the heater core definitely gets warm, the temp from my IR thermometer is posted in here somewhere. I suppose there could be air in the heater core. How would one go about bleeding out?
Thanks for the tip on code 12.