Hi Bill,
Well, I see the TR6 has a metal pipe in the lower rad hose, like my TR4 does. I was under the impression TR6 didn't and that you'd have to cut a lower hose and install a tee. I based my earlier recommendations on that.
Since there is a bottom pipe, I really think that's by far the easiest and best place to put the sensor.
Just remove the pipe, drill a hole in it and weld or have a bung welded (or brazed) into it. Tack weld a #10 bolt next to it for a short ground wire.
Piece of cake. The right size bung can be bought from
www.summitracing.com or a variety of other places. If you take the pipe to a radiator shop to have the bung and ground bolt installed, they might even have a drawer full of the bungs. Just take the sensor along for a test fit. Being partly Scottish, I've even made bungs from cheap pipe fittings bought at the local hardware store.
My only concern would be whether that pipe is stainless steel or not. If it *is* S/S, a S/S bung and special welding would be needed. An exhaust system installation shop might be able to help. They also use NPT bungs for exhaust sensors and they need to weld S/S in some exhaust installations.
On the other hand, if it's mild steel, parts and welding are even easier to find and have done.
P.S. You could terminate the ground to the top of the steering box, where you will probably find other grounds. Or to the lefthand engine mount, which is normally fitted with a grounding strap. Both are close by the lower rad hose. BTW, I also added one more ground wire over to the radiator, for the fan relay that's installed on the side of the radiator.
Yes, the drain petcock on the side of the engine is a *possibility* that *might* work. But, I agree that radiant heat from the exhuast is a real concern. It could effect the sensor operation and/or possibly damage it or the wiring coming from it.
Another concern I would have with that sort of installation: The coolant in the block, particularly near the back, will probably warm up faster than anywhere else in the system and normally be a lot hotter than the return hose coming from the rad. There is a possibility that a sensor there will be in or near a hot spot and kick on the fan too early, before the thermostat has opened. That *might* cause pre-mature cooling from the fan, which in turn *might* delay or hinder t'stat opening. If that happened, it could really upset the function of the cooling system.
And, mounting back there on the block will probably mean running a longer wire than would be needed with a lower rad pipe installation, too. This assumes you are mounting a fan relay that will be pretty close to the radiator/fan/lower rad pipe.
All in all, I still think putting the sensor downstream from the thermostat is best and that lower rad pipe makes this particularly easy.