Hi Jim, no I haven't checked the hoses to the heat exchanger yet, when you say flush them I assume you mean disconnect only the coolant pair and flush the heat exchanger with a hose ?
I did do a bit of fact gathering with the Lexia last night however regarding temperatures etc. Here is what I found:
Engine coolant temperature when the car is cruising above 30mph (even cruising at 70-80mph) seems to settle at about 87 degrees (as measured by the Lexia) and spirited driving doesn't lift it much above 89 degrees as long as I'm going fast enough to have air flow to the radiator.
At much slower speeds in stop start traffic especially after going fast then slowing down the temperature rises fairly quickly to 98 degrees with the fans coming on at 97 degrees. When the fans do come on it does seem to take a long time to cool down below 90 degrees though with only the fans for airflow. Does this all sound normal ? Bear in mind my radiator cap is loose so as to prevent the split seam in the expansion tank leaking when pressurized...
Gearbox oil temperature during my test drive which was a mixture of urban, country road, motorway etc stayed between 98 degrees and 105 degrees most of the time, with the highest I saw being 108 degrees, only after prolonged heavy acceleration at high speed. Cruising at 70mph it stayed steady at 102 degrees. (under the same conditions the coolant was 87 degrees)
What I also noticed is that the main source of heat in the gearbox is an unlocked torque converter... should be obvious I guess, but the rest of the gearbox doesn't seem to generate much heat even under load when the torque converter is locked up, so its no wonder the ECU likes to lock up the torque converter whenever it can.
I found this out because I did a test drive with the gearbox fuse removed to test 3rd emergency mode (checking to see if the torque reduction signal was affecting the engine) in this mode the torque converter is always unlocked and the gearbox is always in 3rd gear.
I went on a fairly short stretch of motorway which is on a steep hill and pushed it hard up there checking the torque reduction figure on the engine ECU. When I pulled over (off the motorway

) to reconnect the fuse I checked the gearbox and the oil was already up to 108 degrees in that short (albeit spirited) 5 minute drive. Without the ECU to manage the torque converter lockup it looks like the gearbox could potentially overheat if pushed hard for long enough.
So in the testing I did last night I didn't really see any signs of overheating as 108 degrees was the hottest it got even when thrashed. The interesting thing is that I could NOT get the car to play up last night either. I was hoping to see the symptoms that we saw when driving to Loch Lomond recently where it got very lethargic and would't unlock the torque converter under acceleration, but it didn't do that, although bearing in mind that first trip was in the middle of the day on an unusually warm and sunny day, while last nights test was on a cold night.
In fact if anything the damn thing was going like a rocket last night when I was wanting it to play up

I could be imagining it, but when I went for a final quick drive with the fuse back in AFTER the test drive with it in 3rd emergency mode, it seemed to be running even better! Almost flawless in fact, at least in terms of acceleration. I'm sure its my imagination but surely we couldn't have something silly like oxidized contacts on the fuse causing low voltage to the ECU (and electrovalves) ?
So what we have now are some temperature figures from when the car is NOT symptomatic.
One thing I was a bit unhappy about though is that the oil temperature on the gearbox is VERY slow to change in response to load. I thought it would have quite a thermal mass but whilst it heats up relatively quickly if you cane it with the torque converter lockup open (reaching 108 in a couple of minutes) it takes a long, long time to cool down...
After caning it up to 108 degrees and then going back to a steady 60mph cruise with the TC locked up the engine coolant is at 87 but it takes many minutes for the gearbox to creep back down to 105 degrees, which is 18 degrees hotter than the coolant. Eventually it will stabilize on 102 with steady 60mph cruising.
So perhaps there is still an issue with the heat exchanger even though on a cold night last night it wasn't heating up sufficiently to be symptomatic ? Perhaps I'm just expecting it to cool down too quickly, I don't have another car to compare it to.
Regarding the torque reduction reading on the engine ECU, with both the gearbox fuse removed (thus no torque control signal from the gearbox) and with the fuse fitted I was able to push it along hard up a hill with the torque reduction reading showing constant zero.

On the overrun it goes negative -10 to -20 and it momentarily goes negative -15 or so when you floor the accelerator but immediately returns to zero and stays there even with full throttle acceleration.
So during last nights test it appears that the torque reduction figure was not interfering with engine performance, but bear in mind the car was not symptomatic last night either.
Other factors to consider are that I'm currently running on Shell V-Power which is 99 octane so if the torque reduction was due to engine knocking on 95 octane fuel it shouldn't be knocking now even with full timing advance! (And doesn't seem to be) Also the Wynns hydraulic tappet additive has been in for a while now and it really does seem to have quietened down the tappets.
At least I know now on 99 fuel the torque reduction figure should be zero even under full acceleration, it definitely was not a few weeks ago on 95 fuel and before tappet additive was put in.
So, do I still have insufficient cooling through the heat exchanger which only rears its head on long drives in hot weather ? Or am I barking up the wrong tree again...(and why does the car run so well when it's under scrutiny with the Lexia

)