18-01-2014, 12:01 PM | #61 | |
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I take your point on antifreeze although US car in California have same issues and I doubt they run any antifreeze (but worth a shot) Basically ANY track with decent straights (100% throttle areas) after a few laps pushing on (and I push pretty hard) after getting up to temperature, after a distance at 100% throttle you see the oil temps again starting to rise first, not much but a rise, followed by water which starts to rise form just under 3/4 to the red (obviously you don't let it go to the red) Once you hit a few corners or if you back off, the car cools back to normal quickly. Tried changing rad(cleaned and flushed), oil cooler(new), MStat, new water pump, new viscous fan, new fuel regulator (as they can make car fun very slightly lean), new fuel filter, also obviously had new engine which rules that out. I thought the symptoms where feeling related due to the 100% throttle issue, but now I'm thinking maybe is air flow and somehow at high speeds the air (entering already at 23-24oC air temps doesn't cool the engine at 100% throttle BUT I am seeing the oil rise first, not water....does that make any difference to what could be the cause?
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18-01-2014, 01:38 PM | #62 | |
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I'm not saying you're big boned Shimmy but.... maybe there is another reason the little donkey overheats in your car?
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18-01-2014, 01:44 PM | #63 |
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Shimmy,
Have you tested the coolant for any signs of hydrocarbons? The symptoms you describe are classic head gasket failure?
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18-01-2014, 02:07 PM | #64 | |
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My cooling issues were very similar to Shim, only in hot ambient temps and the cars are similar spec. I now have Turner Motorsport oil cooler and oil temps do not rise like they did. However, water temps did but slower than before. I would explain the differences some are experiencing is mainly down to driving. You only have to back off a tiny bit to see temps drop back, for example change gear 500rpm sooner. I've sat in many CSL's on TD's and it's quite evident to me how each person uses different revs, short shifts here or there, some are WOT in certain places where others aren't, etc. I'm not saying some are faster or slower, only that some achieve similar lap times but in very different ways. The problem is obviously: the inability of the cooling system to extract enough temps out of the engine coolant under full load once full heat soak happens in hot ambient temperatures. Simply broken down it's either lack of rad cooling area, lack of sufficient coolant flow (restriction) or a combination of both. I think it's coolant flow and I have tried something that up to now has worked. However, I'm staying cautious until fully tested at a really hot TD. So far it's worked at a track in 25 degree heat. That same track in identical temps previously caused the issue. Now waiting for Summer.
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18-01-2014, 02:10 PM | #65 | |
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Mine is identical and coolant has been tested as well as several leak down and compression tests. Anyway, besides that, these engines (in the main) only leak between cylinders when head gaskets go and not into water jackets..........unless head cracked.
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18-01-2014, 02:11 PM | #66 |
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Hi,
Quote - ''...US car in California have same issues and I doubt they run any antifreeze....'' I doubt they do also but that's the point as anti freeze has a higher boiling point than water on its own. The fact that Oil goes up first and water is stable, and then water starts to rise will be caused by the Thermal store [engine] temps rising beyond the water jacket limits. In say 28c + ambinet air temp, then the surface area of the std coolant rad must be almost at the upper factory limits for the water temp at say 80% engine load to rise and only fall, when engine load is decreased. Hence even a 10 or 15 % increase in airflow, given the ambinet air temp of 28c +, will do little to lower coolant temp, either a greater coolant rad surface area so the coolant limits are increased to dissapte more heat under high load or the coolant itself must be able to absorb more heat without boiling. Think of your central heating system at home say a 120,000 BTU boiler running say 12 rads putting out 85,000 BTU, say 14,000 for the hot water cylinder and it copes to say -8 or 9 now drop the external temps to say -25 and the 20,000 spare BTU capacity would be very marginal in maintaing say 75 in the living rooms and 70 in the bedrooms. Remove say two rads by shutting down their rad valves and the overall system gains back say another 10,000 btu's with which to assist in mainting required temps. I think your correct that in heavy load situations with higher ambinet temps the std coolant set up breaches its factory limits, Oil temps start the process by increasing the thermal mass temps [engine] and then the coolant starts to struggle keeping within limits. Its in part why I went with the Heat exchanger and the Tropical stat as the combination of the two lowers my normal operating temps on both water and oil giving a greater margin for when ambinet air temps are hotter which when combined with a few air flow alterations and good concertration of Anti freeze has seen no real coolant issues to date. Another point on air flow, is that the M3 Alloy lower subframe Brace and the front undertray prevent any real airflow around the sump. Some airflow to the sump would also assist in keeping oil temps down. Regards, The Gorilla. |
18-01-2014, 02:19 PM | #67 | |
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18-01-2014, 02:27 PM | #68 | |
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Once again, was first issue but happened before HG failure, after HG failure and after Full engine change. NEXT (been through all these)
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18-01-2014, 03:23 PM | #69 |
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Gorilla and Shimmy
Antifreeze/coolant is used to both stop overheating and freezing. Which I'm sure you are well aware Danny. So yes the Californian cars will run coolant. The coolant % is an interesting one, and something I will monitor. |
18-01-2014, 03:26 PM | #70 | |
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Me and shimmy pretty much same speed at spa, my water temp didn't budge, his moved a lot. It was a hot day circa 28* c iirc.
It's certainly a funny one. Quote:
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