It's just about getting the facts straight to help you or anyone else having the same issues. Unless you are positive your hoses are hot or cold and have a good temperature reading, no one here can help you and it confuses others. You will spend far less money buying an IR gun to diag the problem (which is great for lots of other things) than throwing parts at the truck hoping it fixes the problem. Only reason I suggest that is because the lack of hard data so far causes me to think you are on that path.
Your concern about incorrect info makes sense. I am not convinced about my need for an IR gun.
To backtrack - my initial reason for posting this was to get info on fan clutches to help me do the troubleshooting. The observations I reported initially were quick & dirty and misleading. The thread evolved into a full blown long distance diagnostic mostly on cabin heat. That is not what I intended but I am grateful for all the help I can get anyway. Like I said I am as ignorant as a box of rocks.
Here are the latest, correct observations w/o using an IR gage:
--the fan clutch has a bi-metal spring so it is a thermal type.
--with engine cold the fan can be turned by hand with very little effort. The fan does not freewheel and there is no sign of fluid leakage, no fan wobble or noise.
--after idling for 10 minutes at 25°F ambient the crossover is very warm, and both heater hoses are warm, the right radiator tank is warm, the left rad tank and upper rad hose are cold.
--after idling for 10 minutes, best I can tell the fan is pulling just as much air as it did when cold started.
What I've read indicates that a on a cold start a thermal fan clutch will be engaged and moving a lot of air because of fluid settling when the engine is off. Spinning a while will redistribute the fluid and the fan speed will be reduced until the air coming thru the radiator gets hot enough to work the bi-metal spring and fan speed will increase. I do not have a tach to put on the fan to know for sure.
My primary concern was not cabin heat but whether or not the engine was being over cooled. The more I think about this it seems the only way the engine could be over cooling would be no thermostat or a thermostat stuck open. If the fan clutch stuck in the high speed mode that would not matter if the thermostat was working.
From here:
1. I need to install a coolant temp gauge to know whether or not it is cooling properly.
2. I need to check the heater core air control door and blow the dirt out of the core.
3. Both heater hoses are warm so there is some circulation. Would not hurt to flush the core anyway.
If anyone has additional input, I'd be glad to hear it.
Regards
Jim