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View Poll Results: Are Low temp thermostats effective for making your Boxster run cooler
NO - They make no difference in steady state operating temp. 6 30.00%
YES - I think my car runs cooler but have never really measured it. 10 50.00%
YES - and my car runs faster with the low temp thermostat. 3 15.00%
I don't care if it works; I just like modding my car... 2 10.00%
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 20. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 06-02-2013, 06:24 AM   #1
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I find the poll options a bit stilted; an option for "Yes, it makes a difference in the steady state operating temperature" is conspicuous by its absence..............
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Old 06-02-2013, 06:59 AM   #2
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Originally Posted by JFP in PA View Post
I find the poll options a bit stilted; an option for "Yes, it makes a difference in the steady state operating temperature" is conspicuous by its absence..............
Agreed. My initial biases got that better of me. It was not a conscious mistake i assure you. My apologies!


Still no one has answered my initial question about the heater circuit and if it is independent of the thermostat.
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Old 06-02-2013, 07:50 AM   #3
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Agreed. My initial biases got that better of me. It was not a conscious mistake i assure you. My apologies!


Still no one has answered my initial question about the heater circuit and if it is independent of the thermostat.
OK, then I'll answer it: First, the heater core is always "on", meaning it has circulation even when the AC is running, but that circulation pathway changes during warm up. The M96 has a bypass coolant circuit that allows some low level volume of coolant to circulate while the thermostat is fully closed. This circuit is actually there to help prevent head cracking as they get hot very quickly. As soon as the stat begins to open, much warmer coolant begins to flow at a much higher volume rate, giving the driver much more heat.
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Old 06-06-2013, 09:38 PM   #4
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well, since no one else will give a straight answer, yes the coolant going to the heater core does bypass the thermostat on p-cars, like any other car does, and a low temp thermostat can only reduce the performance of the heater.

may I go ahead and ask the next question?

Has anyone else monitored the coolant temperature on a 987/987 with an actual scan tool, and noticed that it does vary just like the older cars, but the gauge does not move?

I have seen this trend in temp gauges for the last 20 years or so. Porsche and Mercedes were some of the last to have actual temp gauges. Now pretty much every car that has a gauge is lying to you. It is no more effective than an idiot light at telling you what the engine temp is. In fact if it replaces all lights that would indicate a problem with temperature before damage can occur, it is less effective, since it is a lot harder to notice the needle jump from the center position to the top of the range once it gets out of the range that the controller is set to allow while it holds the needle steady in the middle.

P.S.: all M96/M97 cars use the same thermostat which includes 987s and 997s up to 2008, and I'm pretty sure the 9A1 tstat is the same temp but a different housing, or lack there of.

I will say, however that a lower temp thermostat can prevent an engine from running too hot, because by lowering the normal operating temperature of the engine, it will take longer for the temp to rise to dangerous levels when the cooling system's capacity to cool is overcome by higher ambient temperatures or hard use. It will still eventually get too hot under those circumstances.

Last edited by autodoctor911; 06-06-2013 at 10:01 PM.
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Old 06-06-2013, 09:55 PM   #5
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Has anyone else monitored the coolant temperature on a 987/987 with an actual scan tool, and noticed that it does vary just like the older cars, but the gauge does not move.
Yes, I do it most everyday with an Autologic as I do my 86 mile test runs in customer's cars. Just did it this morning in an 08 Cayman S with my 4 liter package. I have also quantified the values using analog instruments and my 28 channel data logger with all stand alone sensors as well as OBDII channels. What I note is the coolant temps of the post 2006 engines runs substantially cooler than the older cars and though it may vary all the values are lower when compared to similar engines one generation older.

This is how we developed the lo temp T stat for LN in 2007. In temperatures as low as -27F heater performance wasn't an issue with the LN T stat. For a 1,000 mile trip the warmest conditions that were experienced were in the mid teens F. If the heat was reduced it wasn't enough to cause any issues or discomfort.

As I continue to develop Cayenne engines at elevated displacements and solving cylinder wear issues with them we are finding the same things as we noted with the M96. The dynamics of the thermostat housing changed dramatically with the 9a1 DFI flat six and now at 4.2 liters we ave learned just how far we can push them before mods need to be made and now I am developing those mods.

This is a pic of a factory bore from a 2012 Cayman R with 4,400 miles on it that I disassembled as a base for my 4.2 build. All the cylinders were this worn at 4,400 miles with zero track time. Welcome to the next generation.


Here is another cylinder on the opposite side of the engine.


Back on M96s, we tore this 27K mile factory Porsche crate engine yesterday as it sounded like it had bad lifters, but it didn't. The noise was a toasted cylinder and piston that was rocking at mid-bore and creating the ticking sound.
Here is the piston


And its cylinder
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Last edited by Jake Raby; 06-06-2013 at 09:59 PM.
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Old 06-16-2013, 03:22 PM   #6
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So the 05 987,s run hotter than the 06 987,s.Am i reading this rite Jake?
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