Anyway, the contents of the video are just as interesting: There’s wax that melts and solidifies inside of a brass cylinder in the “t-stat” assembly, which operates based on engine temperature, impeding or allowing the flow of coolant by using the heating and expanding wax to open or close the valve. I just love how simple the process is, yet it remains effective.
The 318ti is almost at 210,000 miles, but the little hatch hasn’t exactly gone through thousands of hassle-free miles since we last checked in. I’m at the outset of a mild cooling system refresh — new lines, new water pump, new plastics, new thermostat, and a coolant flush — and I was reading up on my favorite forum, when I came across this video from Mahle, which explains how a an outlet standard thermostat works:
So, I wired the fan directly to my battery to get my car to the shop. Weeks later, I was still precariously wiring the fan directly the battery in order to force it on like some barbarian. But as any owner of an ancient shit box can attest, there are levels of annoyance, and sometimes we put up with ad hoc repairs and shitty workarounds until something disastrous happens. For now, I’ll stick to driving only at dusk and dawn, when the ambient temperature is no longer set to bake.