In a message dated 10/25/2010 5:07:59 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
bhughes@qnsi.net writes:
I have an unusual problem ā my oil temperature is about 40F
lower than my water temperature. I have 2 oil coolers and 1 water
radiator.
Iām considering converting 1 oil cooler into a water
radiator. Obviously my oil temperature is going to increase, but if the
water temperature is improved significantly will this also help in reducing
the rise in oil temperature. So far, my experiments have shown that
reducing the oil temperature has little effect on water
temperature.
Does anyone know if reducing their water temperature also
reduces oil temperature? ā or are the two systems mostly independent?
Jeff
Whaley
The ideals would be 160-180 water and 160 max oil temps.
Water temps track power output slowly. Water (coolant) is taking heat out
of aluminum and can do this at a very high rate (aluminum radiator). So
water temps wander up and down slowly with power changes.
The oil is a poor conductor of heat. Hard to heat and hard to cool. The
cast iron rotors are cooled by oil, badly foamed sprayed into the center holes
from the jets in the crank. So rotor temps are difficult to control. And rotor
temps can limit HP if not well controlled.
High rotor face temps limit cylinder filling and "in effect" reduce the
engines displacement. Part of rotor cooling is the intake charge absorbing a lot
of heat (Radiant energy) from the rotor face. When this is going on, the
high charge temperatures decrease the charge volume ingested, increase burn
rates, and moves you closer to a detonation event.
Not usually a factor in NA engines or very low boost turbos. So long as no
other factors are in play, like a spark plug with too high a heat range, a burr
on a ground electrode, best power mixture, (stay lean or rich of best power),
ignition advanced too far. Or oil too hot, or carbon build up on the rotors
forming a glow plug.
Once you have the oil too hot, it will take a while to get the
temps back down. You must reduce fuel consumption. Hotter oil, more foam,
worse conductivity, longer cool down time.
Also keep in mind that the over heated water or oil is making the coolers
more efficient, so the effect is not quite as obvious. Too hot is actually way
to hot.
In racing I told the driver to short shift when the oil was too hot. Like
180-190. So instead of shifting at 9,600, shift at 9,300 for a lap and see if it
comes down a bit. This never worked out, because the driver never blinks
for 45 minutes and his drivers suit is wet from adrenaline running out of his
nose. So I installed a second dash board with a movie camera pointed at it. Very
informative. Missed shifts, wrong gear, not close to the rev limit, on the rev
limiter, no regard for temps????????????? Like talking to the cat.
Too low an oil temp is one curse I never had. With 3 Setrabs.
The actual temps would be nice to see......
Lynn E. Hanover