More Rear Mount Oil Cooler Questions, Setrab Setup |
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More Rear Mount Oil Cooler Questions, Setrab Setup |
BeatNavy |
Jul 6 2020, 08:47 AM
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#1
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Certified Professional Scapegoat Group: Members Posts: 2,938 Joined: 26-February 14 From: Easton, MD Member No.: 17,042 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
I'm trying to nail down why I'm having oil cooler issues. Specifically, I've blown two sandwich plate adapter seals in the same place / manner. In addition, during my test drives I wasn't necessarily thrilled with the temp drop I was seeing.
First, I'm running the Setrab oil cooler and Setrab sandwich plate adapter. Anyone else running the Setrab sandwich plate adapter without any issues? I know I'm not the ONLY one, but how many people run this as opposed to something like the Mocal setup? Second, when I contacted Pegasus Racing to order more seals, I spoke to the tech guy who gave me some food for thought. The most interesting thing was he said the oil cooler needs to be mounted with the inlet and outlet ports facing up, otherwise the cooler won't fill up all the way and you won't get ideal (or any) cooling. Here's my setup with it angled somewhat down for what I hoped was good airflow: http://www.914world.com/bbs2/index.php?s=&...t&p=2826235 Essentially he says the oil takes "the path of least resistance" which could largely be from the inlet port to the outlet port using few of the cooling rows. I assumed the pressure would fill the cooler, but I can see what he's saying. Any thoughts on that? If that's the case, I really need to completely redo my mounting setup and plumbing. |
GregAmy |
Jul 14 2020, 08:13 AM
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#2
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 2,397 Joined: 22-February 13 From: Middletown CT Member No.: 15,565 Region Association: North East States |
Rob, next time I'm driving I can shoot the IR onto the oil change and taco plates and see how well they correlate to the dipstick.
I like the idea of a cooking thermo to check air temps under there. Edit: as a somewhat-related aside, I'm also surprised at the enginecompartment/air intake temps on my car. I've got the Intake Air Temp sensor inserted into the bottom of the stock D-Jet air cleaner, and I'm regularly seeing IATs of 130F+ at cruise, and that's with the rain tray removed...so that's all going into the intake for cylinder/head cooling. And that's with all new seals all around the engine tin... |
Frank S |
Jul 15 2020, 11:10 AM
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#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 135 Joined: 15-April 15 From: Wiesbaden, Germany Member No.: 18,632 Region Association: Germany |
Rob, next time I'm driving I can shoot the IR onto the oil change and taco plates and see how well they correlate to the dipstick. I like the idea of a cooking thermo to check air temps under there. Edit: as a somewhat-related aside, I'm also surprised at the enginecompartment/air intake temps on my car. I've got the Intake Air Temp sensor inserted into the bottom of the stock D-Jet air cleaner, and I'm regularly seeing IATs of 130F+ at cruise, and that's with the rain tray removed...so that's all going into the intake for cylinder/head cooling. And that's with all new seals all around the engine tin... Hi Greg, I had experienced the same heat soak problem with tha MAT Sensor mounted in the original D-Jet position (plenum). The plenum is physicaly conected to the engine case and has a huge surface are which is not ventilated well close to the engine case, seeing alot of radiation. During normal driving with CHT of 320°F and oil temps around 215°F MAT was around 149°F. With the open element sender mounted inside the snorkel I was able to reduce the MAT reading down to 118°F under the same conditions mentioned above. This was meassured with the raintray mounted at ambient temp of 83°F. I think you are still meassuring at a not optimal spot or your MAT Sensor is not an open element sensor. Regards, Frank |
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