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Ron,

If you are running a thermostat, the motor MUST have some way to recirculate coolant, bypassing the radiator, when the thermostat is closed (motor is cold).

On some cars, the heater core flows coolant full time. Not so with the Pantera, our heater cores only flow coolant when the valve is open.

The other way to recirc coolant is with a bypass. On the Windsors, that's the little hose with the 90 degree bend between the water pump & intake manifold. The Windsor bypass flows full time, never shuts off, therefore it is intentionally a small passage.

The Cleveland bypass passage is internal to the block, it's the passage below the thermostat that leads to the passage missing in the Weiand water pump. Ford engineers designed the Cleveland coolant system this way because they can recirc more coolant during warm up, this speeds up the warm up time, prevents steam pockets from forming in the cylinder heads and allows the motor to warm up more evenly. It also means if you install the wrong thermostat, the car will have a tendency to over heat under heavy loads, because too much coolant is bypassing the radiator FULL TIME.

Here's the problem with the Weiand water pump on a Cleveland motor. You have a thermostat installed in the block, as normal. You are also running the Weiand water pump that defeats the motors ability to recirc coolant internally. Your heater valve is also closed. In this situation, when the motor is cold & the thermostat is closed, the water pump CANNOT pump coolant, it is pumping against a dead head. This is not a good situation, and poor engineering. This is why you'll never read me recommend the Weiand pump.

The Weiand pump must be used with a Windsor thermostat, AND some method to allow the engine to recirc coolant, or with no thermostat at all.

Your friend on the DTBB, George
I am aware several Pantera vendors sell the Weiand pump. I don't understand why. If you do not recirc water during warm up, if no water is flowing into the engine block, the heads WILL develope steam pockets. I do not consider that a desirable thing. If anyone is running the Weiand pump, I suggest they run their heater valve open until the car warms up. That is the most expedient fix until something better can be done.

In the mean time, here's 2 pics of the pump I'll be installing in my Pantera, George

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Images (1)
  • Edelbrock_water_pump
Mark,

your engine needs to be able to recirculate coolant from behind/below the thermostat back to the suction of the water pump.

The idea is that when the motor is cold & the thermostat closed, coolant MUST still circulate through the block & cylinder heads.

This is true with any motor, not just a Cleveland or Windsor.

Your friend on the DTBB, George
Whooooa! What a factory oversight! Yup I got a Weiand pump too. I think you can fix it by drilling a hole for the bottom block water port just below the two horizontal bolt holes and plumbing it to one of the Weiand redundant pump passages.
I just talked to Weiand, and they say there is no problem. Sure not for them, but me...
George...is it the beer? What brand is it? I need some too!
George, Thanks from me too! I had read previous threads and concluded that the Edelbrock pump was the one I needed, but knowing that you are using it as well makes me feel very confident (plus having you confirm it is the 8844 helps!).

Thanks again from your friend (and student)...

Mark
Oh man ! LOL I have mine installed and all cleaned and shiney !! The worst part is I either have to retro the wieand or go for the 165 for the edelbrock. Whats your take George ? Anyone have a pic of the drilling and retoring the Wieand, I understand the concept and theory but not sure I understand exactly what the Retro of the Wieand is ??? Or should I just go for the edelbrock ??
Just to throw some more gas on the fire. I have the Weiand on 2511. Put there by Dennis Quella. Has the plate added to the impeller to improve circulation. Triple pass aluminum radiator. Have had the car for 16,000 miles. Live in central CA, hotter than the dickens in summer. Run the A/C, stop and go traffic. Temp is never above 220, never hisses, burps or gurgles.

Maybe - I have never pulled it off - there is a hole drilled for circulation. I don't know.

I think I understand the theory behind what George is saying, and it makes sense, but I can't see where the missing circulation path is causing any trouble at all in my real-world situation.

YMMV

Larry
George,

Do you know if the Milodon or Flow Kooler high volume water pumps for the 351C have the by-pass? Summitt (just down the road for me Big Grin) are selling both at around half the price of the Edelbrock, so that begs the question is the Edlebrock that much better and good value for money?

#7024 is overheating badly (straight line up to 260!!) so while I have the system down to change the thermostat I decided I'd change the water pump as well. I'll also check the pressure tank cap too, as I read that can be a huge problem if not seating properly, especially here at 5,000 ft where coolant boils at lower T's. Anyone know an off the shelf replacemnet part # and pressure rating for the cap?

Julian
I don't know about those brands at all. I will say that you can drill the Weiand pump for the bypass.
It isn't that the casting for the passage isn't there, it was just never drilled. All you need is a 3/8" drill bit and something to turn it and about 10 minutes of time. Other then that the Weiand pump is a high quality pump at around $100.
The edelbrock is around $170.
Julian,

I can't answer your question, I've never seen the business end of either of those pumps.

There are several Pantera owners, and Cleveland enthusiasts on the Cleveland Forum running the Flow Kooler pump, and they are happy with their purchases, the pump lived up to its claims of improving low speed coolant flow & resolving over heating problems. The impeller of that pump looks more like an egg beater than a centifugal water pump, but it delivers the goods. What Flow Kooler is hush hush about is what happens to the flow curve of their pump at engine speeds above 3500 rpm, whether it continues to pump more coolant (desirable), flattens out (not so good) or actually decreases (very bad).

I'm not aware of anybody using the Milodon pump, about all I can say is that Milodon parts are generally choice quality stuff.

Take a trip to Summit, have them pull a pump from stock & take a look for yourself, take your digital camra with you and snap a picture for all of us to see.

The Edelbrock pump has a cast iron, curved vane impeller, which is a highly efficient pump design, compared to paddle wheel type impellers as found in the oem pump & the Weiand pump.

If your motor is still tuned to pass smog, it will run hot. That state of tune is converting less of the combustion energy into work, and more into waste heat, hence higher engine temperatures. The ignition advance needs to be set to acieve highest intake manifold vacuum, as I have instructed folks to do on several occasions. Setting it that way will optimize the motor at low speeds & idle, convert as much combustion energy as possible into work, and as little as possible into waste heat, and reduce the heat load on the coolant system at low speeds.

Your cool running friend on the DTBB, George
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