Rusty,
Yes my oil temperature was high, which is why I redesigned it to improve
both water and oil cooling. I don’t
think though that the oil cooler was the cause of the high temperatures, but
rather being overly optimistic about making air go around corners.
Steve
-----Original
Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]On Behalf
Of Russell Duffy
Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 2004
6:05 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: high oil
pressure and coolers
If you really want to run the evaporator core as your
oil cooler, why don’t you move the oil filter upstream of the cooler. That would reduce the pressure to the
cooler, and also eliminate some downstream restriction.
I could do that, but not all that
easily. At the moment, the evap core isn't doing the job anyway, so
it's probably not worth the effort to try to save it.
The other option to lower the primary
pressure is to install an aftermarket regulator on the oil outlet at the
front cover. Bruce said you could also take off the front cover, and
modify the original regulator spring to lower the pressure to about 110
psi. I don't plan to do either of those, but they are
options.
Steve Brooks (running the stock oil cooler)
Weren't your oil temps way up
there? For some reason, (note to Bill Dube) I was convinced that the
stock cooler wasn't going to work well enough, which is why I went with the
evap core. I don't think I've heard John complain about his oil temp
(everything else... <G>).
How many people are running stock 2nd or
3rd gen coolers, and have temps under 210?
Sadly,