I was very impressed with Ian's (squiglyzigly) thermostat modification and vowed to copy it. It's only taken me a year and a bit, but here's my take on the mod that Ian has pioneered. The hardest bit was probably getting hold of Renault Clio/Megane/Scenic /Kangoo thermostat housings in aluminium. It seems that Renault have moved to plastic for these components, which I didn't really want. I'm sure that modern hard plastics will do a perfectly good job, but I just prefer metal.
I then acquired a standard Mini thermostat, but in the hot climate (74 degree C) version - part number GTS102. The 84 deg C (temperate climate) version is GTS104 and the 88 deg C (cold climate) version is GTS106. I got mine from Rimmer Bros (
www.rimmerbros.com) who charged me a paltry £4.32 inc VAT for the privilege. These stats are fractionally larger than the Renault housing, but a few seconds with a flap wheel in an angle grinder soon encouraged it to fit snugly.
The lip on the Renault housing has a depth of 3.5 mm and the i.d. is 53.5mm, so I tracked down a suitable o-ring to fill the gap. I got a pair of Viton o-rings (you need two) from simplybearings for £6.47 delivered. They are actually a British Standard (BS 828) and measure 3.53 mm in cross section and 46.04 mm internal diameter. They serve a dual purpose of sealing the thermostat on both sides and stopping it flapping about loose in the housing.
Both housings (you need two) have a small relief port, one of which will need to be closed off. I removed the spigot on one of the housings and then had my local welders seal the port with some weld inside and out. If using plastic items I guess a hacksaw and some epoxy resin would work.
The last thing I needed was a gasket. I'm sure I could have tracked down the Renault part, but instead opted to make my own from some 1mm thick gasket material I had. On reflection, tracking down the Renault gasket would probably have been simpler. I haven't done final assembly of the unit yet (the bolts in the pics below are just finger tight, but when I do I shall probably use Threebond liquid gasket, as that has never yet failed me when being used on motorbikes. Again, probably overkill but I hate doing jobs twice.
So thanks again to Ian for the initial inspiration and here are the pictures.