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oil/water heat exchanger (oil cooler) |
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tomj
AMC Addicted Joined: Jan/27/2010 Location: earth Status: Offline Points: 7544 |
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Posted: Oct/23/2018 at 12:18pm |
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i finally got around to looking at OEM type oil/water (so-called)
oil coolers. came across this Ford jobbie that is very, very seductive: basically
it sits between the oil filter and the oil filter remote mount and has a
small stacked-plate heat exchanger in it. it has 3/4" heater hose
connections. it's better than an air/oil cooler -- surrounded with regulated temp water it speed engine warmup. surely
it's not thread-compatible with the AMC filter, i assume. but the Ford
app is remote, so a remote filter kit neatly solves the problem. no harm
in a modern huge Ford diesel oil filter on the AMC engine either. i've
been quiet here because i guess i'm exiting stock/resto AMC concerns at
a rapid rate. i just came back from a two-day tour with my vintage
sports car friends. an Accusump solved oil pressure loss in turns, so
now it's throttle through turns. with that i might do some autocrossing
(oil pickup dry was a major limitation) so i can get some documentable
numbers. to the point here though, if you are
doing anything endurance you need an oil cooler. my 195.6 OHV would be
dead twice over without it. i've got an 8 x 10 cooler with fan. on one
run from about 2500 to 5000 feet, the road west into Wrightwood in the
Angeles Forest, WOT, 3000-3200 rpm, 5th gear, solid 20 to 30 minutes, on
the steeper inclines it slowed, i kept my foot in it. up at the peak,
170 F water, 190 oil, slowed to a smooth idle (then roaring back down
the hill). the Dorman 918-110 and like it
look like a great add-on solution. i'm all set for now but i plan on
seeing if the local O'Reilly's has one in stock i can put my hands on.
and also go look at a Ford F-250 oil filter to see what that looks like
(threads, etc). gets some measurements and all that. i've
put 24,000 miles on this little engine in 18 months, most of that in
2018 so far (not done yet!), half of that "at speed". back in 2015 i
melted all lower end bearings in this motor doing half as much work,
before i added oil cooling (and probably more important, good machine
work). i'm def out of power, lol! i did
get a 70's porsche 911 to pull over and let me by -- on a long downhill.
run where power doesn't matter as much. on the uphills they all kill
me. but in turns this thing's killer now. |
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1960 Rambler Super two-door wagon, OHV auto
1961 Roadster American, 195.6 OHV, T5 http://www.ramblerLore.com |
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mixed up
AMC Addicted Joined: Jun/16/2015 Location: Monroe mich Status: Offline Points: 2177 |
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if your looking for some ideas take a look at 78 mercruise boat power stearing cooler u can tap off the sending unit hole and run it through those coolers I have a spare if its worth some thing to you let me know
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69 amx 290 auto
65 220 290 4spd 80 ford fairmont |
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Jmerican
AMC Addicted Joined: Mar/29/2016 Location: Seattle, Wa Status: Offline Points: 585 |
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Cool story. What kind of car is this? You can source nice stacked plate exchangers of the style you are looking at, but with a better fit in terms of filter. Check out 4792912ae mopar. You can easily run a ph8/fl1 type common filter with internal bypass.
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tomj
AMC Addicted Joined: Jan/27/2010 Location: earth Status: Offline Points: 7544 |
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wow! OK that was the sort of thing i was looking for in the first place. i dont think you can suck enough heat out by bleeding oil off the main gallery. also it would lower oil pressure. the best place for normal engines (eg. not the 195.6) is in series with the oil filter. power steering doesn't generally flow a lot of oil (GPM). no idea what that boat app would be. and restrictions in oil flow are a bad thing. but it's the type of cooler i was looking for because the plumbing is so straightforward.
it's the roadster i made from a 61 american: http://sr-ix.com/Roadster/. that mopar part looks air cooled? but it's interesting that chrysler is following the same "add on" cooler technique. air-cooled would definitely not be adequate for the 195.6. it needs serious cooling. my 10 x 10 stacked plate with electric fan running 100% cools the oil to only 190.) (i think a lot of people are dubious of my claim that pretty much all "daily driver" 195.6's need an oil cooler; all i'll suggest further is to screw a temp sensor in the back hole in the main gallery, and measure. no need to take my word for anything.) |
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1960 Rambler Super two-door wagon, OHV auto
1961 Roadster American, 195.6 OHV, T5 http://www.ramblerLore.com |
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Jmerican
AMC Addicted Joined: Mar/29/2016 Location: Seattle, Wa Status: Offline Points: 585 |
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After checking out your site, I’m now catching your drift. I thought you wanted a small warmer.. those exchangers really work well to stabilize oil temp, and will provide some cooling as well, but not along the lines of what you need. Either you want a Motorsport grade thermostat and both types, or thermostat and larger oil to water exchanger. A marine exchanger builder could make what you want, with fittings all sized right. Or laminova type would be better/lighter/more efficient. The marine exchanger is really designed for high temp differential and would not be as “cool” as one might think. That old water pump might be a good candidate for a better impeller as well.
Cool car, thanks for sharing it. |
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ramblin64sw
AMC Nut Joined: May/31/2012 Location: SoCal Status: Offline Points: 274 |
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Love your roadster! Thanks for sharing the link to your build. It would be nice to see it in person some day. Very impressive.
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akimmet
AMC Nut Joined: Aug/02/2012 Location: Republic OH Status: Offline Points: 428 |
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The Mopar unit isn't air cooled, the water fittings are just on the end the filter screws on.
The Ford units you found are for Super Duty trucks with gas engines, not diesel. The Ford units take the fl820 and fl500 filters. These have the same gasket size as older Ford/Mopar/AMC filters but have a M22x1.5 thread instead of the more common 3/4" or 13/16". |
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