Over the years I have had numerous complaints of " My Viper runs too hot". In most cases I knew this was normal predicable and part of the personality of the car. There is not a lot of airflow through the front of the vehicle and at low speeds on hot days with the AC on the temperatures can approach 240 degrees. On the track when pushed hard many Vipers overheat.
We tried bigger radiators, water wetter, slowing down the water pump, different thermostats and cycling the fan on earlier and longer. None for this really helped at low speeds, but helped a little at high speeds. Adding a duct under the car did help.
The big problem is airflow. Finally we found a fix. Adding fans to the front of the radiator made all the difference, better than the other fixes. We know have a kit that goes in-between the oil cooler and the AC and packages well. It comes with
brackets and wiring and can be set up to come on with the existing fans.
For those interested go to our website at DC Performance: Proven Performance
We tried bigger radiators, water wetter, slowing down the water pump, different thermostats and cycling the fan on earlier and longer. None for this really helped at low speeds, but helped a little at high speeds. Adding a duct under the car did help.
The big problem is airflow. Finally we found a fix. Adding fans to the front of the radiator made all the difference, better than the other fixes. We know have a kit that goes in-between the oil cooler and the AC and packages well. It comes with
brackets and wiring and can be set up to come on with the existing fans.
For those interested go to our website at DC Performance: Proven Performance
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