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Date:         Fri, 21 Jun 1996 18:09:29 -0700
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         DOUGLAS <douglas@bigpig.pig.net>
Subject:      Re: 2nd Oil Cooler...(Long-ish)

James Burns wrote: > > >> First David wrote: > >> > >> >> Most people I know who have coolers in their engine compartment have the > >> >> hot side of the cooler routed out through the floor of the engine > >> >> compartment, which takes care of that problem. > >> > > >> Then Douglas wrote > >> > > >> >If you do that you could be robbing air from the engine cooling system. > >> >Other components could run hotter ;>) > >> > > Then I wrote: > > >> Douglas, I'm going to have to put some of the weight of "book learnedness" > >> behind David. The air inlets on any year VW are oversized for their purpose > >> of admitting air to a stock engine. If that weren't the case, one would > >> hear a lot of turbulence-induced noise from that location at higher fan > >> speeds. The tiny passages between cooling fins are the real culprit in > >> limiting airflow, especially at high air velocity. Making more outlet area > >> should only help. The pressure drop in the engine compartment due to the > >> extra flow from the extra fan and outlet duct will be very small. > > > Then Douglas wrote back: > > >The engine compartment runs with a DEPRESSED atmosphere. If you merely put > >a hole > >through the engine compartment and put the cooler into it, air flow will be > >inward; preheating the cooling air. If you put a fan on the unit to pull > >air from > >the engine compartment, you depress the atmo. more and reduce cooling. Just > >opening the window vents makes a 10 deg diff in engine temps due to air flow > >changes! > > > I had also written: > > >> This same principle is true for the flow of gases through the engine > >> itself: big carburators and high-flow heads are wasted if a decent set of > >> headers (preferably tuned) aren't used. > > > Douglas wrote: > > >But a stock engine does not need any additional cooling. And just because an > >engine is bigger does not mean it runs hotter. Its still pushing the same > >LOAD. > >No more energy is needed to push the load it under like conditions. > > > >If he still runs hot he's probily using cheap fuel and to much timing, > >maybe to > >lean on the carbs. Something else is wrong other than cooling. > > > I had also written: > > >> And for those who don't trust over-educated types, if I remember my > >> inspection of Rev. Hoover's Grendel, it has the bottom-ducted internal fan > >> arrangement. Nuff Said. > > We all agree: > >> >> >If you put it under the van, it will get wiped off the first time > >> >> >you go over something in the road. > > My response and Question now is: > > Always implied if not stated was that a secondary (electric) cooling fan is > used to push air through a deck mounted cooler and out the bottom. Without > the fan, air comes through the hole into the compartment.

And Douglas wwrote back;

Just an old habit ;>) I try to answer all the questions I can think of.

> Granted, the use of additional oil cooling is often a treatment and not a > cure for the usual causes of overhreating: bad gas/mixture/timing, air > management, low oil, fan problems, etc. but I disagree that a bigger engine > will not run hotter. Increasing engine displacement without beefing up the > cooling system is a bad idea. Even if the stock and enlarged engine are > pushing the same LOAD the bigger engine is almost always going to have > poorer efficiency at the same speed (eg. gearing). This inefficiency leads > to heat production.

I must disagree. Carnot's equation states that the higher the engine temp the more efficient the unit. Work is work. If I push my split with a 36 hp at 60mph, when I replace it with my new 1600 DP 65 hp unit, I still only draw 36 hp (if that) to push it at 60 mph. Why would a larger engine run hot pushing a lite load? The engine will coast along at 40-50% load and should run cool. If not, you got a problem beyond an oil cooler;>)

> All that aside, cylinder head temperatures of enlarged VW engines seem to > be the killer, not oil temp, and the two do not increase at nearly the same > rate. Roasting heads may not show up as a large increase in oil temp. > > Question: given that wing vents cause 10 degree F increase in temp, what > are my elephant ear mirrors doing. Also, are the aftermarket inlet scoops > the PO took off my splittie worth putting back on? > > Regards, Jim > > Dr. Jim Burns > San Diego State University > 5500 Campanile Dr > San Diego, CA 92182-1323 > 619.594.6076

The point I try to make is that VW did a pretty good job designing these things. Most people try to use water cooled thinking on an air cooled beast (said lovingly:>) VW's run hotter than water pumpers, period.

I run elephants too. Never overheat.

If you still have your scoops, put 'em back on. They really help.

I may have missed it but I thought the problem was with a stock engine. When you start field engineering mods you open a hole new (and real big) can 'o worms.

Have fun

Douglas


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