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Nissen is used as OE by many car manufacturers while SKP and 4 Seasons has been around for a long time. I know all 3 of them for their radiators.
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benbug wrote: ↑11 Feb 2026, 16:59Hi chrism, the specialist said 30 degrees was greater than normal. The temps he registered were out:105 in:140. It was only blowing about 95 degrees out of the vents inside. I'm not sure about the drop/ difference if the fan isn't blowing.chrism wrote: ↑10 Feb 2026, 11:11 A 30 deg drop between connections does sound like a lot but I don’t know what would be considered normal. It kinda sounds like the coolant is moving through the core very slowly.
When you saw the 30 deg drop was the blower fan running and was it blowing strongly, albeit not real hot, out of the floor vents?
How much does the temp drop if the blower fan ISN’T blowing.
What were the actual temps you witnessed going in and out of the core?
Did you flush the core in both directions?
Yes, I did flush in both directions and saw some crud come out. At the end had good, clean flow

Yes I’ve thought about the coolant inside the hoses being hotter than the plastic pieces on the outside. However, both hoses will be subject to that same inaccuracy so, relative to EACH OTHER, I can still see a roughly 30 deg drop in coolant temp. But rather than a difference of 140 vs 105 it might actually be something like a difference of 165 vs 130. Whatever, it still tells me there is a significant level of heat dissipation off of the core. Keep in mind Benbug has verified there’s circulation through the core. Hence my questions about the temp gauge reading and the thermostat housing/upper hose temp.
I believe the specialist I took it to did that but going to text him to confirm. But that had we thinking about the climate control module and how to rule out if it's gone bad or not. Apart from ordering one online, swapping it and testing the heat, are there any other ways to rule it out?