Friday, Jul 19, 2019 at 10:48
Bravo man, you're not alone in this Colorado/D-Max overheating issue. See the linked discussion thread, below.
It appears that the airflow through the cooling system is barely adequate at best on these Isuzu-based vehicles.
One D-Max owner had an improvement in operating temperature by removing the A/C condensor thermo fan, which apparently improves the airflow.
I have a mate with a 2005 Rodeo (manual) and we did a cleaning session on the condensor and radiator, and I noticed how "tight" the fit is, of all the cooling components. There's not a lot of spare capacity there, by way of airflow.
I noted that one poster (marknx) in the linked thread claimed that he installed a manual radiator, along with a transmission cooler with its own radiator, and this cured the overheating problem he'd had.
The theory is that the cooling tubes for the auto tranny in the automatics radiators slows down the engine coolant flow, which creates the engine heat buildup on long pulls on steady gradients.
The manual radiator doesn't have the coolant tubes for the auto, thus the engine coolant can circulate at a better rate, leading to improved heat transfer to the air.
This does make sense, it could be
well worth a try, just sourcing a manual Colorado radiator in good condition from a wreck, and installing it.
You will have to modify your auto tranny cooler, of course.
D-Max overheating under load
Cheers, Ron.
FollowupID:
900770