Thermostat Heater Control

2003 Ford Windstar BaseSECTION Thermostat Heater Control

The primary objective for the thermostat heater control is for improvement in fuel economy and thermal efficiency. The system consists of a high temperature 208°F (98°C) instead of a 194°F (90°C) thermostat that has a resistive heater within a wax element. See Fig 1. The heater is controlled by PCM dependent on engine speed, throttle position, engine load, vehicle speed, air charge temperature, transmission oil temperature and engine coolant temperature. During low speed, low load and low air charge temperature conditions, the thermostat heater is OFF and engine is allowed to operate at an elevated coolant temperature. This should result in lower internal friction and higher thermal efficiency, both leading to improved fuel economy.

Fig 1: Identifying Thermostat Heater Control
G00088423Courtesy of FORD MOTOR CO.

During high speed, high load, high temperature conditions (air charge, transmission oil or engine coolant), PCM output is energized with a duty cycle to thermostat heater. This heats the wax and forces thermostat to rapidly open wider allowing extra coolant to flow from radiator. This will reduce coolant temperature and improve with performance demand. The heater is only capable of supplying a small amount of additional heat to wax element. It is not capable of opening thermostat alone. The thermostat is 100 percent duty cycle for short calibrated time and than duty cycle is reduced to a maximum of 70 percent ON and 30 percent OFF. Unheated, thermostat will begin to open at a coolant temperature of about 208°F (98°C), and will be fully open at 226°F (108°C). Energizing heater will reduce opening temperature to about 154°F (68°C), and the fully open temperature to 217°F (103°C).

RENDER: 1.0x

NO RELATED

Recommended Tools & Savings

Use the Manual With the Right Hardware

Pair factory procedures with proven DIY tools so the instructions are easier to execute.

Affiliate disclosure: We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

When to See a Mechanic

Stop DIY work and contact a certified mechanic immediately if any of the following apply:

  • You smell fuel, burning insulation, or see smoke.
  • Brakes feel soft, pull hard to one side, or make grinding noises.
  • The engine overheats, stalls repeatedly, or misfires under load.
  • You are missing required tools, torque specs, or safe lifting equipment.
  • You are not confident in the next step or safety outcome.