As some of you know, I drive a Quantum. VW shoved the radiator so far off to the side that it's actually behind the alternator, so it kinda requires having a fan to cool the engine, even at highway speeds.
I've been dealing with overheating issues. First the thermostat exploded. Then, last night it was overheating again, took time off work this morning to diagnose insufficient power getting to the fan switch. I'd get power but under load there was nothing. Somebody replaced an underhood junction connector with a SCOTCH-LOCK and this of course resulted in much green death. Repaired that properly, now I can power the fan by jumpering the switch, but gotta clock in and get cars repaired and make money, but it's fixed now right? Right?
Of course, this wasn't the only problem, and it was overheating again after work, problem manifesting far from home. What to do?
Modern cars have all sorts of neat heat-management algorithms in the software. For example, at critical temps (usually 260F) they cut one bank of cylinders and cool the engine with air, switching banks every so often. Maybe 40hjp at WOT but you're not stranded and not killing the engine.
This is not an option when you have a distributor and Bosch K-jet that probably has vacuum tubes in its control box. BUT! We can improvise.
Limp car up hill, eyes solidly locked on temp gauge. Crest hill at decent clip - 70-75mph in this case. When you start going downhill, shut engine off, leave in gear, and mat the throttle. (Helps if the engine has the compression of an old lawnmower with the easy-start governor stuck on) The engine gets lots of air, cooling it from the inside, the water pump will still be circulating coolant to the radiator, and the coolant is moving without added heat from combustion.
5-10 seconds of coasting is worth about 25-30 degrees drop in coolant temp.
Limped it all the way home this way. Never pegged the gauge.