***77K20 -- I sure would try to determine why the coolant temp swings so much. Could be a sticky T-stat. 170 degrees is not a good thing. Also, you might want to try putting something in front of the radiator in the winter, like a piece of cardboard to start with, and something more durable like sheet metal if the cardboard works. Or how about an electric fan instead of your mechanical fan? It would be dead still until some preset temp, like 190.
Also another thought on the coolant temperature swing... GM had this in the owner's manual for the engine:
"Any small block engine, regardless of year, that uses Vortec heads, will require an external coolant bypass line from the intake manifold to the 5/8" hose nipple on the water pump (passenger’s side). Suggested routing is from the 3/8 NPSF boss on intake manifold to the water pump."
I had also read about this for dozens of hours and seems people say 4 things on this.
1) They do nothing and it works great!
2) Coming from the intake manifold to a heater core works as a bypass
3) You have to come off of the front of the intake to the water pump.
4) Just drill out 3 holes in the thermostat to provide a bypass.
I'm doing #2 currently. I tried #3 but both fittings are very close together. What GM showed was a water pump that had a built in nipple sticking out of the pump. I just had a tapped hole and put in a straight fitting. I forced a section of heater hose on there and it leaked. I removed it.
For the new intake I'll run from the intake to the heater core and to the radiator. I'll also go out of another port near the thermostat on the driver's side thru the coolant passage under the TBI and then back to the water pump. If for some reason that doesn't work or somehow provides too much bypass (is such a thing possible?) then I'll run everything in series. Manifold to TBI coolant passage, to heater core, to radiator.