Td27 temps

For all topics relating solely to diesel engines and modifications
Post Reply
User avatar
RJT
Hard Yaka
Posts: 245
Joined: Sun Jan 07, 2007 12:00 pm
Location: Christchurch

Td27 temps

Post by RJT »

Hi all.
I've just installed a water temp gauge and just wondering what temps people notice on standard/modified td27t at 100km. What's normal, what's the danger zone etc
Cheers, Rhys.
2008 R51, 2.5TD. 265/70R17 R/T's, 1.5" Rancho lift, Ironman snorkel and Deluxe winch bar, SCA 12,000lb winch and 9" LED spotlights, Kings awning, Alpinestar roof box, GME TX3100 UHF.
BlakeNZ
Hard Yaka
Posts: 710
Joined: Sun Jun 16, 2013 10:50 am
Location: manawatu

Re: Td27 temps

Post by BlakeNZ »

unmodified, mine(1997 ETI) ran at approx 72 degrees from memory. which suggested the Thermostat was stuck open.
So sourced a new nissan one. Pulled the old one out, and they have a manufacture date on them, and it was the original thermostat!!! The new thermostat runs the truck at 83-84 degrees the whole time, but lifted to 88ish when driving in loose sand.
User avatar
stovanovich
Hard Yaka
Posts: 286
Joined: Thu Oct 17, 2013 5:54 pm
Location: Auckland, NZ

Re: Td27 temps

Post by stovanovich »

Cruising at 100 on long trips mine sits around 90 deg on aftermarket temp gauge / just between 1/4 & 1/2 on factory gauge.
I think when you get up past 120 is around about the top of factory gauge. I've never let it get up near there so dunno how much higher you'd want to go.
Te Rino
'92 Nissan Terrano | Intercooled TD27T | 33 x 10.5s
Build Thread: viewtopic.php?f=18&t=42742
Image
"Hubs In, Caps Off"
BlakeNZ
Hard Yaka
Posts: 710
Joined: Sun Jun 16, 2013 10:50 am
Location: manawatu

Re: Td27 temps

Post by BlakeNZ »

Since then, i have had the EGR blanked, and the oil breather line(that feeds oil back into the turbo air inlet pipe ) diverted to a catch can, but the water temp figures haven't changed that i can tell.
Intake and exhaust mods haven't been done yet.
User avatar
RJT
Hard Yaka
Posts: 245
Joined: Sun Jan 07, 2007 12:00 pm
Location: Christchurch

Re: Td27 temps

Post by RJT »

Interesting.
First run up the motorway and it got up to between 95-98* peaking at about 100* momentarily, the factory gauge was reading about 1/3-1/2.
Back down to 85-90* at idle/town speeds and 1/4 on factory gauge.
It's an el-cheapo electronic gauge and the red area starts at 100* so was unsure if it was getting a little hot up where it was.
I'd have thought any intake/exhaust mods wouldn't affect coolant temps? (correct me if I'm wrong)
2008 R51, 2.5TD. 265/70R17 R/T's, 1.5" Rancho lift, Ironman snorkel and Deluxe winch bar, SCA 12,000lb winch and 9" LED spotlights, Kings awning, Alpinestar roof box, GME TX3100 UHF.
BlakeNZ
Hard Yaka
Posts: 710
Joined: Sun Jun 16, 2013 10:50 am
Location: manawatu

Re: Td27 temps

Post by BlakeNZ »

they lower them only a little bit. The motor runs cooler when it can breath easier, which means the water doesn't get quite as hot.
But thermostats, clean radiators , water pumps and airflow are a much bigger influence on temps.
User avatar
stovanovich
Hard Yaka
Posts: 286
Joined: Thu Oct 17, 2013 5:54 pm
Location: Auckland, NZ

Re: Td27 temps

Post by stovanovich »

Something to bear in mind is that 100deg pressurised is nowhere near boiling point. If anything that's probably just over half on your factory gauge. Might pay to look into changing your gauge to something that reads a little higher.
Te Rino
'92 Nissan Terrano | Intercooled TD27T | 33 x 10.5s
Build Thread: viewtopic.php?f=18&t=42742
Image
"Hubs In, Caps Off"
derk
Hard Yaka
Posts: 836
Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2014 5:05 pm

Re: Td27 temps

Post by derk »

100° is a bit on the warmish side if the vehicle isn't under load how el-cheepo is the el-cheepo guage I've never had a lot of confidence in cheep electric gauges :D and where is the sender installed the head is the most critical place where the intensity of the heat is so that's where you want the sender :D
User avatar
lax2wlg
Hard Yaka
Posts: 1437
Joined: Sat May 12, 2012 8:33 pm
Location: Various areas

Re: Td27 temps

Post by lax2wlg »

Being all iron, They do seem to run quite hot the TD27s. Its astonishing how hot they can get without so much as breaking the head gasket.

Kiwipete blew the top tank of his radiator off, put a new rad in it and kept going.

I've had mine up to 130 with no ill effects.

Very sturdy engine
TOYOTA - The Official Vehicle of ISIS!
And makers of the '92 Camry, where you got your first backseat handjob.
User avatar
RJT
Hard Yaka
Posts: 245
Joined: Sun Jan 07, 2007 12:00 pm
Location: Christchurch

Re: Td27 temps

Post by RJT »

Sender is in the top hose.
It's just a cheap from super cheap.
Hot afternoon and went for another open road run into the steaming N/W wind and it stayed steady at about 100*.
Might use that as the benchmark and button off if it gets much higher than that.
2008 R51, 2.5TD. 265/70R17 R/T's, 1.5" Rancho lift, Ironman snorkel and Deluxe winch bar, SCA 12,000lb winch and 9" LED spotlights, Kings awning, Alpinestar roof box, GME TX3100 UHF.
User avatar
kiwipete
Hard Yaka
Posts: 2328
Joined: Fri Apr 01, 2005 12:00 pm
Location: Christchurch

Re: Td27 temps

Post by kiwipete »

lax2wlg wrote:Being all iron, They do seem to run quite hot the TD27s. Its astonishing how hot they can get without so much as breaking the head gasket.

Kiwipete blew the top tank of his radiator off, put a new rad in it and kept going.

I've had mine up to 130 with no ill effects.

Very sturdy engine

Nope, never blew the top tank off, just boiled the bugger!
Ok people, move along. Nothing to see here. Thank you, move along.
Ph 0212078472
Clayton
Stropper
Posts: 5
Joined: Sun Jun 28, 2015 7:19 pm

Re: Raising a R50 Terrano

Post by Clayton »

Hi guys. I own a 96 terrano td27. I would like to lift the vehicle up a bit. The vehicle has McPherson strut front suspension and coil rear. Has anybody out there done this. I don't want to go to the point of having to risk my driveline components so maybe 50mm would be ok. Has anyone fitted strut spacers? Any thoughts guys? What can I do and what should I avoid?
User avatar
fh2014
Hard Yaka
Posts: 304
Joined: Mon Oct 20, 2014 4:48 pm
Location: North Shore AKL

Re: Td27 temps

Post by fh2014 »

Wrong thread bro, you'll have more luck stating a new thread in the nissan section. Cant help you with the 96 year either sorry, only the earlier model. Best of luck
User avatar
Crash bandicoot
Hard Yaka
Posts: 2924
Joined: Thu Dec 30, 2010 7:19 pm
Location: Towing a hilux

Re: Td27 temps

Post by Crash bandicoot »

18 psi all the time, no thermostat 3 inch striaght exhaust with snorkel and barrell air filter on a T24 Garrett A/R50 see's 40 to 70 on the highway, 70-80 in around town traffic and near boiling when it's full of mud. oh and twin electric fans not a viscous.
Waiter...there is a drought in my glass.
ChurchurDan
Hard Yaka
Posts: 574
Joined: Sun May 12, 2013 7:49 pm
Location: North Canterbury

Re: Td27 temps

Post by ChurchurDan »

This isn't really relevant to the original question but a lot of late model cars don't switch the cooling fans on until the engine temp is 106-108 degrees and some as high as 112. If you coolant system is pressurising correctly 100 degrees should not be a problem.
User avatar
RJT
Hard Yaka
Posts: 245
Joined: Sun Jan 07, 2007 12:00 pm
Location: Christchurch

Re: Td27 temps

Post by RJT »

Huh, old thread. I was having brake problems at the time and the rear brakes were gripping due to being supplied the wrong brake master cylinder so the engine was working a lot harder than it needed to at 100km.
She's now running between 92-95 open road. Still need to replace coolant as its real old and mostly water now and should really do waterpump while it's empty.
2008 R51, 2.5TD. 265/70R17 R/T's, 1.5" Rancho lift, Ironman snorkel and Deluxe winch bar, SCA 12,000lb winch and 9" LED spotlights, Kings awning, Alpinestar roof box, GME TX3100 UHF.
Post Reply

Return to “Diesel Engines and Modifications”