Here is what you can do that will improve your cooling ability. (Assuming your using the stock bypass cooler that runs off the filter mount and then dumps back into the pan.)
Run it like stock, to your air to oil cooler. (The stock one.)
Then before you dump it into the pan, run it through the cooler on your radiator, then into the pan.
This will do two things.
On very cold days, your oil can be too cold, and running it through the radiator will keep it at the right temp, not too hot, or not too cold.
On hot days, the air to oil cooler will drop the oil temp first, and the water to oil cooler in your radiator does not have to work as hard to maintain the oil at the right temp.
If you look at newer Toyota's, most of them have a water to oil cooler for these very reasons. (You want the oil to be about 180 to 200f all the time, it works better at this temp, and it's able to vaporize water in the oil, a major source of contamination in most oil.)
Have fun. (My setup has a thermostat on the cooler, so it only flows through the cooler when it's over 180f. Actually, 90% bypasses, and 10% flows all the time, but it goes exactly the opposite at temps over 180f from what I understand.)