Would folks with water cooled 914's please post some photos of your radiator set up, and details of what metal was cut for inlet, outlet holes, fan details, etc... also list type / size of motor you are cooling.
Looking for proven idea on a cooling system for a Buick V6 engine 3.8 liter.
Like to see what has been done for any water cooled engine, V6, V8, Subaru, mazda etc...
Thinking maybe a front bumper area inlet, adn with right ducting an outlet/fan on trunk floor. I kind of like Philip hauns set up (Blue Thunder car) but waant to check out other options. The "holy grail would be to locate the enitre cooling system in the engine bay, but I thinkt here is too many space, heat issues.
What have you all done?
thanks in advance
This setup is yet to be proven, but this is how I am doing my Buick 3.8.
http://www.phoenixhobbies.com/html/cooling.html
Paul
how much did will this cost in parts?
renegade's system is about $1150 shipped.
Jim,
I figure I have spent a little over $800.00 so far. Maybe a little bit more to finish it off.
(keep in mind that setup was sized for 3.8 V6 with about 250 - 275 HP, a V8 would require a larger radiator)
I use an electric water pump with griffin radiator. 305 ci V8
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/nicksws6/detail?.dir=a032&.dnm=29e3.jpg&.src=ph
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/nicksws6/detail?.dir=a032&.dnm=6c77.jpg&.src=ph
Great thread, keep the pics coming.
Nickm1 : In your photos I saw a front quarter shot, and the air intake wasn't visible; does the air come in from below the bumper ?
Nickm1 & PhoenixNM : both of your setups blow air into the front trunk; where does it exit ? Fender cutout ?
jsteele22,
Fender/wheel well cutout for me.
Paul
anyone with experience with a front bumper area intake, and a trunk floor outlet? (rather than inner fender well outlets) that would be my prefered system I think, as long as it cools ok. I am doing a 3.8 V6.
The intake is just below the front bumper. And there are 2 giant holes cut into the wheel wells. You can sort of see them in the pictures. I'll try to take some better pictures for you. The front intake doesn't seem to be working well for me though. At high speeds 80+ there isn't any airflow and I overheat. Better shrouding around the fan might fix that problem also.
Nick -
As you mentioned, better shrouding around your fan would probably solve your
problem, as well as going to a 2 fan set up with the better shrouding -
Can you guys who are using the Griffin radiators tell me which model # and where are you getting them ???
Bought it from Summit Racing, I think the part number was 2-28185-X
Went back and looked at the order form and the part number is 2-58190-X
http://store.summitracing.com/partdetail.asp?autofilter=1&part=GRI%2D2%2D28185%2DX&N=700+115&autoview=sku
Paul
Kind of an impulse buy, but I just bought 2 radiators off EBay.. Aftermarket replacment radiators for Honda Del Sol (mid engine, anyways...). The core size is just under 14" x 14" x 5/8". And it includes a transmission oil cooler. The application was for a 1.6 L engine, so I figure 2 should work if I can find some airflow.. Plastic tanks, but what's a CSOB supposed to do ? Both radiators, including S&H for $75. Sorry, no more at that price (unless I can't get mine to fit )
Don't have a definite plan for where to put them yet, but I'm gonna start out seaching for room in the engine bay.
Unless you came upon this http://www.superstreetonline.com/featuredvehicles/turbo_powered_honda_del_sol/
nice set up PJhaun, so the floor is theoutlet on yours? how is the inlet set up? or is it the other way around??? is this the "blue Thunder" car? i have seen photos of it, very nice! it is still a 3.8 V6 right? You have a usable front trunk as i recall.
If the floor opening is at a high pressure area, would a say rubber 'air dam" under teh floor, in front of the outlet hole work to produce a vacuum to help scavange air out of the trunk, assuming the inlet is at the bumper area? or is that not needed? On my car the floor is cut out, the fender inners are open, adn the bumper area is open, all told too much stuff removed!
ENGINE BAY RADIATORS: (the holy grail, no front trunk cutting)
the Del Sol radiator at 14x14 inch could fit maybe on either side of the engine bay right under the engine lid grill (maybe go to a full grill lid?) the air flow would naturally be up from under and out the grill I assume. (opposite teh stock 914 direction, but the 914 is fighting to push the air from the grill, down and out the bottom by using a sealed engine "tin" and the air blowing impeller.
The only issue we might have with the air flow from the bottom up, past the engine and out the enigne lid grill is that the air will go past teh hot engine, and headers prior to going thru the radiator(s). What might be cool (no pun intended) is too get a radiator(s) that would span the entire engine lid grill (assuming the issue of preheated cooling air from the engine/headers). The large area would make it possibel to run a thin (single core) radiator. this would then leave room thickness wise for fans under the radiators The radiatorscould be monted ont eh lid, and with rubber hoses, allow to move with the lid when opening it for engine access. If thickness is still an issue, i suppose a custom engine lid could be made that stand offs higher than the stock one. might block the bottom of the rear window, but heck, you could use two side view mirros for rear vision.
This would be a nice set up (if it cools ok) for flat motors like the subaru, or boxster. however with a taller motor like a V6 / V8 with a tall intake manifold there may not be much room. On my Buick V6, the air cleaner all but touches the engine lid, so maybe two radiators could be used, one on either side of the intake manifold, and aircleaner. Battery / relay board could be relocated to give more room on the sides.
However i am still concerened that the cooling air, coming up from under the car might be too much prehated by the headers. Likely less an issue on a subaru, with headers under the engine, but maybe a problem with V6 / V8 engien with the exhaust ports up high on either side of the engine. They is right up near the top . i suppose heat wrap on teh headers might help.
I guess it is time for air flow tests with little strings tapped on the grill, and some thermo-couples on the engine lid, to see the effects of the header heat on the lid area.
Any thoughts on this???
that giant hole in teh floor will accumulate positive presure into the trunk above 45 MPH unless you use a very low splitter up front and a spoiler under the leading edge of the hole.
Here is the front bumper this is where the air comes in to the radiator.
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I remember seeing an oil cooler mounted to the engine lid on a 3.2. IIRC, it was a tight fit but the owner said it worked good. Cannot find the photos right now.
Here's mine.
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For a lid mounted radiator, flexable corregated hoses would bend better than the stiffer smooth ones. For a flat subaru engine, you'll have more room for fans and such, for a V6/V8 the engine is pretty tall.
anyone have got a good source for thin, wide and short radiators?
if I coould fine some (cheap used0 i would testbed them on my V6 Buick 914, it is kind of a hack car now anyway, ready for experiments, it runs good, but i could test the engine bay radiator design, without too much trouble (me thinks), if it fails, I'll just re-hook upt he front radiator.
the V8 cars with big engine seem to use rather large radiators up front, might be a bit of a stretch to get that much cooling (if truely needed) out of the engine bay.
I want ot consider this, i'd love to try a water cooled conversion without cutting up the trunk. I thinkt he best bet is the flat Subaru for this, thickest radiator and full width to boot.
how ever since i have V6, that is what i'd like to try, space is an issue.
How about for engine access a quick connect hose for coolant, it will have to be large diameter, and seal when disconnected, some one must make something like that for industry (Air Force surplus in flight refueling nozzels!)
That would work too, but with the V6 / V8 cars there is a limited space above 9the Subaru should give much more space, plus the headers are down low, not up near the top like the V engines.
one option that still kind of stays in my plan of not cutting up the body would be to make a raised up engine lid, maybe raise it a few inches to gain room for a thicker radiator / fan. the raised section would be screened for heat outless, maybe full screened like the 916 cars. The body need not be cut up for this, just a customized engine lid. I think the corregated radiator lines will work bending the 70-90 degrees when you open the lid. They seem very flexible verses the smooth lines.n Just leave a big enough service loop.
I got mine in there somewhere.. (click on my build thread)
If you want to copy a setup. The first link is the best. Its rennegades setup and works better than anything i've seen.
Measurements of the buick V6 car show only about ten inches betweent eh headers (HOT!!!) and the engine lid, figure the radiator is stood off one inch, thickness is two inches, and fans are three inches, give a meger four inches betweent he fans and thetops of the headers. Also since the carb / aircleaner is so high (near touching engine lid screen), figure the middle one foot of the engine lid is unusable in the V6 application.
For me, if I were to try it, a raised engine lid would be required, just how much,a nd much rear window i want to block is the question. I see that the engine lid is only about ten inches wide (after allowing for the hinges) so maybe I have space for two ten inch by ten inch radiators. That is small combined, than the one radiator I have in front. Of course my front radiator maybe over sized. I almost never need to turn on the fan, even in stop and go traffic, perhaps i could get by with less radiator, if fans are used, but I am still passing the air over the hot headers. Will need temp measurement s next.
Looks like we might be doing a radiator set up like Philip Hains. I don't like the idea of cutting into the front fenders all that much. There is too little room in the engine bay with a V6 for radiators back there I think (the chance of pulling it off I think is too low, even with lots of work) I don't like the idea of cutting up the front trunk too much, but unless I can shoe horn radiators inthe engine bay, that is my only option.
any more ideas on this beofre i commit to a plan?
The lack of space int eh engine bay freaks me out, but i stillthinkit would work with a subaru. (hell anyone got a cheap subaru enigne , and mounting kit?????, maybe ditch the V6 for it? Ahh there i go plotting again.
if you can lose the headlights, Boxster/996 dual rads...
BTW, Roger had a long thread about alternative cooling systems...
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what are the boxster radiator dimensions? width, hieght and thickness? if there are thin enough, maybe just maybe I can have them sqreezed into the engine bay????
thanks
i got a new chassis, hate to cut it up for radiator however. I am stillthikng if i replaced the engine lid with a taller one, full creen, i can fit some radiator(s) with fans, may partially block my rear window, but heack, thats waht the sideview mirrors are for.
Do you know if they tried to fit the rabbit radiaotr(s) with a stock engine lid inplace? and what motor were they tring to cool, a V8? or smaller?
I have come to the belief that to properly cool an engine you need ram-air from either a scoop above or below the car, (or to the sides for that matter) or from mounting on the front. I had no ram-air on my car for some time and it worked for around town on cool days. When I tried to take it on the freeway it was pure thermal runaway as the radiator could not keep up with the 100% (albeit little throttle) duty cycling of the engine.
So wherever you mount the radiator try to make provisions to get forced air into it. Also make sure you have GOOD electric fans. There can be as much as 50% difference in CFM ratings for fans of the same diameter.
My results with the engine-bay radiator are mixed. While I haven't finished off the ducting completely (there are some gaps in the ducting still) for the most part it cools okay. The situations where it doesn't cool are when I'm not getting enough ram air. That is primarily in traffic (stop and go is okay, the fans do fine with that) about 30-40 mph. Above 40 or so, the ram air seems to do the job fine. Below that I think I'm just not getting enough pressure at the input of my scoop. One more thing I want to try is putting a rubber flap extending down further towards the ground from my scoop. This will help build pressure and because its rubber shouldn't be damaged by speed bumps.
Eventually though I am going to go with a front mounted radiator. I want to be able to take my car to the track, autocross, etc. in hot weather and not have to worry about heat. To get the same ram-air effect anywhere else on the car is really difficult. I'm planning on running the coolant lines through the cabin of my car above the stock tunnel and use a Scirocco double-pass style radiator.
-Tony
Here are some pictures (from my thread) of my cooling system.
By the way, there is not much room to put in a radiator on the engine lid. A pair of thin fans, yes, but a radiator, and fans, not really. And this is about the lowest you can get for an engine. I have cut the oil pan and moved the engine down 2 inches from where it would be otherwise.
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My advice is no coolant lines inside the cabin. two reasons:
1. they really do get hot, you'll not like it in the summmr
2. if not all metal, welded up, they might spring a leak on you, and I mean ON YOU. (I have had that bad experience. ) it will scald you big time. in event of a crach, even all metal welded line may rupture, you do not want 240F collant on you in a crash.
my adice is run metal lines under the car, or in beind the outer rocker. witht eh right line, placed carefully under the car, you loose very little if any clearance tot eh ground. I got a car with rectangular steel tubing for the line, they are only about 5/8 inch tall fit snug ont eh bottom of car, int eh depression on either sdie of the tunnel.
No coolant lines in the cockpit, please!!! you will be much happier with them outside the cabin, really.
Actually the plan was (copying Bondo's idea) to run insulated aluminum tubes above the center tunnel and then once in the engine bay use hose, as well as up front.
Since I have a cable shifter in my car I will very soon have a much much taller center console/tunnel. That means the insulated tubes would be covered by a console. Therefore even in an accident it would be unlikely that I would get hot coolant on me.
I want to be able to lower my car, put a flat bottom on it, and apair of venturi tunnels as well. Having coolant lines running under the car would interfere with that setup.
-Tony
Has anyone ever evaluated the area behind the rear wheels- either with a scoop or other inlet, or perhaps dual radiators on each side? I'm not sure which way the opening should face, or what the orientation should be, but there is actual open space in there in the qp. It would be close to the engine, too.
I exit hot radiator air through the front hood and use a custom 3 core aluminum Fuidyne radiator and twin thermostatically controlled fans. It runs between 175-185 degrees. At speed, it runs at 175...at a dead stop for 30 minutes in 95 degree summer heat...it creeps up to 185. This design produces downforce...unlike the more popular technique of venting out the wheel wells or front trunk floor.
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