Jump to content
Click here if you are having website access problems ×

The age old oil temp debate


mav

Recommended Posts

I recently posted on another forum:

 

I've recently fitted a Laminova to combat 'high' oil temp, that was causing low oil pressure on track or road. Fitting the laminova has stabilised the oil on long runs at just over 80 deg, and water temp is the same. on track, the oil now only rises to 90 - 95 deg and the water stays at 80 - 85. I have changed the stat to an 82 deg jobbie too

 

The reply from after sales ( Caterham) was:

 

We do not consider it necessary to fit an oil cooler to a standard Seven below the R500 / race car levels. In doing so you are rejecting more heat into the cooling system, which is more likely to create problems than 'high' oil temperatures.

 

Remember - if it was prudent to fit coolers to track day cars, we'd be flogging them and I would be making money *wink* - but we aren't.

 

My advice would be to not fit an oil cooler - it isn't necessary and may actually do more harm than good.


 

Anyone care to add to this debate?

 

 

Edited by - mav on 22 Jun 2003 19:12:00

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh I dunno... Hondas, At least here in the States, all come with a Water/oil cooler fitted. Millions are so fitted, with no apparent problems.

The intended Purpose being to bring the Oil up to temp quicker AND then stabilise the Temps..it Works.

Mebe you should'nt do business with your quoted source :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Mav

 

Nice chatting at MIRA...... thanks again for the suntan lotion *thumbup*

 

Well I have a standard oil cooler and bypass thermostat before the cooler in the oil lines. All cheep well except the Aeroquip connectors connectors send you a photo if you like.

 

There are cheaper options Aeroquip connectors.

 

Oil filter mounted just below the carbs WELL out of harms way. 😬 😬 😬

 

'Can you hear me running' ......... OH YES and its music to my ears 😬 😬 😬

1988 200 bhp, 146 ft lbs, 1700cc Cosworth BD? on Weber's with Brooklands and Clamshell wings, Freestyle Motorsport suspension.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Where is the oil temp measured ?

 

I have my temp sensor in an external dry sump tank and the peak oil temperature I've seen when running hard on a hot (30+ celcius) day was 115 degrees.

 

However, this bothered me not in the slightest because I was told by the tech department of the oil company whose products I was using that the oil will happily run at 150degrees for short periods of time and that a constant 130-135 degrees was perfectly acceptable, although I would probably notice a reduction in oil pressure (which I did at 115 degrees - about 5psi at peak).

 

I have fitted an oil cooler but that's largely to add some additional volume to the system, not because I'm worried about the temps per se. In fact I'm not sure how much cooling effect the cooler produces because the only place I could easily locate it is quite shielded.

 

To be honest, at temps of around 90-95 (depending on where they're being measured of course) I wouldn't be inclined to worry too much.

 

Incidentally, my coolant temps were pretty stable too - I think I've only once seen it creep over 100degrees (and then the coolant temp sensor died 😬 ) but normal (on road) running temp is about 80 degrees for water and 80-85 for the oil.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Nick

 

Your missing the point.

 

Its not all about HOT its more about getting the oil up to best operating temperature as FAST as possible after that the oil cooler comes into play.

 

Oil temperatures are initially much lower than the water temperature until you have done say 30 road miles. That's in summer. In my car in Winter doupt the cooler ever sees any flow. Fitting a bypass thermostat is about keeping an optimised temperature rather than over cooling. That = longer engine life.

 

Its not measured by a stat its an all in one auto bit of kit.

 

Oil coolers are for track days and very fast blats in the Sun. Say yesterday long high speed motorway run the sprint irrelevant at MIRA that's more trying to get the oil up to getting the oil up to temperatures more important. Doupt any oil on a run Saturday ever went though the coil. Now if it was a track day then after say 3 laps the cooler would see some or all of the flow.

 

See http://www.thinkauto.com/ then products then oilstats mines the top left or right in the pictures.

 

So sometimes on the track the coolers are needed other times its more a wear item than a benefit.

 

'Can you hear me running' ......... OH YES and its music to my ears 😬 😬 😬

1988 200 bhp, 146 ft lbs, 1700cc Cosworth BD? on Weber's with Brooklands and Clamshell wings, Freestyle Motorsport suspension.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nick,

 

My oil temp is taken from the apollo tank. Oil pressure was dropping enough to worry me on track when the oil was getting up to 110 - 120 degrees.

 

Bilbo,

 

good to chat to you yesterday. Glad to help on the sun front *cool*. The Laminova is fitted to acheive qiucker warming of the oil, and to provide additional coon=ing on track.

 

Cheers

 

Martin

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Mav

 

Yesterday my oil pressure was spot on all day. In fact it was ott due for an oil change but never found the time still last years oil but then not a lot of mileage 😳

 

So why is the expensively is Laminova so great *confused*

 

I added the thermostat at the last rebuild year 2000

 

Going off line its now time to eat going off line

 

'Can you hear me running' ......... OH YES and its music to my ears 😬 😬 😬

1988 200 bhp, 146 ft lbs, 1700cc Cosworth BD? on Weber's with Brooklands and Clamshell wings, Freestyle Motorsport suspension.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Adding an oil cooler (with thermostat) will increase the total cooling capacity of the engine (provided the oil cooler and radiator get separate air flows!). A Laminova will redistribute cooling capacity between the oil and water systems. If the Laminova does what you need, i.e. decrease peak oil temps without raising water temp, then you're sorted. If you have a different problem, you may need a different solution. Given the different states of tune and driving styles, it's a bit presumptuous to rubbish someone elses solution.

 

Crash team to the Upgradeitis ward, the withdrawal symptons are getting worse

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There is only one efficient place to lose heat from the engine bay and that is at the nose of the car. That is why air/oil heat exchangers are mounted at the nose, usually compromising the already extant water radiator.

 

The Laminova moves the heat into the single circuit where it can be dissipated into the airflow most efficiently. It is also thermostatically controlled, maintaining the oil temperature suitably.

 

If Caterham don't think wet sumped K-series engines have oil temperature problems then they should be talking to the people I talk to and open their eyes a bit and wonder how come the oil temperature on a wet sump car gets easily to 110 degrees plus while dry sumped cars see 80 or thereabouts.

 

"More harm than good"? Oh please, start acting like you have an ounce of engineering nous.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Does using sythetic (Mobil 1) improve your high temp lubrication?

 

One would assume that using a 0 w 40 or 5 w 50 would improve your low temp lubrication because of improved flow rates. *confused*

 

Awaiting enlightenment

 

No officer, the wheel is on the RIGHT side. *wink*

Red Super Sprint De Dion 6 speed

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Its not all about HOT its more about getting the oil up to best operating temperature as FAST as possible after that the oil cooler comes into play.

 

Oil temperatures are initially much lower than the water temperature until you have done say 30 road miles. That's in summer. In my car in Winter doupt the cooler ever sees any flow. Fitting a bypass thermostat is about keeping an optimised temperature rather than over cooling. That = longer engine life.


 

I must say I've not noticed my oil temps taking that long to rise but, to be fair, it is a little warmer here than sunny old England 😬 Even so, it never took 30 miles to get the oil up to a sensible temperature so maybe it's a product of different engines ??

 

My oil temp is taken from the apollo tank. Oil pressure was dropping enough to worry me on track when the oil was getting up to 110 - 120 degrees

 

Ah, I wasn't sure how hot it was getting before, just how hot it was getting post laminova thingy being fitted. And I agree, at those sort of temps I'd be looking for an oil cooler of some description (which is why I have one I suppose 😬)

 

As mentioned, I observed a reduction in oil pressure when the oil gets hotter but not enough to worry about. Again, different engine / dry sump set ups will do different things.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oil temps > 110C or even upto 150C may be fine for the oil when tested in a laboratory , but the rubber seals and gaskets in your engine wont like it very much .

 

Laminovas are fine for road work , providing you have sufficient capacity to absorb the additional heat into the water cooling system .

 

For track work I would prefer a air/oil cooler with thermostat as I wouldnt wish to place further load on the water cooling system .

 

Its each to their own on this one and it depends what capacity you have "spare" in the water cooling sysytem and if you are dry or wet sump .

 

Dave

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Support Team

If you fit a Laminova oil/water heat exchanger then you are obviously dumping more heat into the cooling system. If you then get a more efficient radiator then it should cope with that extra heat. The question is - what are the options for a new radiator. I have a Superlight but it is fitted with a standard (black) radiator which has seen better days (some of the fins are a bit crumbly now!). Which is the best choice of radiator to increase heat dissipation? Caterham sell an ali road radiator and a triple pass race radiator - which of these would be best for road and track driving? Is the Radtec radiator better (more efficient) and how much is it?

I have experienced water temperatures of 107 (on road and track) and oil temperatures of 120 on track and would like to reduce these just for peace of mind.

Shaun

 

Yellow SL *cool* #32

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can't find anyway to understand Caterham's point of view in these circumstances other than them being ****ed off that we (ie the sevens community / third party suppliers) having the idea and sense to rectify a problem before they did... *mad* *mad* *mad*

 

With a PACE dry sump and laminova mine all seems perfectly happy now. the thermostat controls the temperature of everything, no thermal shocks, oil temp peaks in temp smoothed out, oil pressure always happy (and easy to control with the regulator screw on the pump). Only possible thing left to do is the QED remote thermostat so it acts on the temperature after the engine rather than before...

 

HOOPY

R706KGU Hoopylight R

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also - fitting the laminova does add more load to the coolint system - you're just transferring the heat through the laminova instead of the block. hence less thermal stress, faster equilibrium of tempertures etc.

 

And if you have a decent rad (ie not the 6 tonne black painted things) then it copes easily.

 

HOOPY

R706KGU Hoopylight R

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Support Team

Hoopy,

What radiator are you using? I am thinking of fitting a Laminova but I also need to address the high water temperatures so need a recommendation for a new radiator.

Shaun

 

Yellow SL *cool* #32

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can someone tell me if I have the same problem. Bought the car a couple of weeks ago, did a trackday at Goodwood the following day, have observed the following:

 

running gently (ie. in traffic) - oil temp sits at 80-90

going hard (ie. on road, out of traffic) - temp can get over 100

on track (trying hard anyway!) - definitely over 100 / 105 ish, after which I was short-changing in 4th and 5th

 

The car (1.6 Superlight) has 8k miles and is standard spec, having an anti-cav tank; I tend to leave it running until the oil /water temp has setlled to nearer 80.

 

Is this normal?

 

Is it likely to cause any damage?

 

What are the best solutions - cheapest and most effective?

 

many many thanks

the toad

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Support Team

Mr Toad

I wouldn't worry about those temperatures - they seem fairly normal. I have had 115-120 degree oil temperatures on track which I don't want to maintain for any period of time hence the desire to fit an oil/water heat exchanger (Laminova). I frequently get oil temperatures over a 100 on a long blat.

Shaun

 

Yellow SL *cool* #32

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Nick

 

In posting 30 miles I was thinking more about winter and slower driving that's to say not track days or fast road. Actually when I used the car in winter on very cold its taken say 1-2 miles before the water thermostats even opened. You can tell when that happens as the temperature gauge drops a few degrees even more in winter. Another 3-4 miles before the water is up to temperature. Then the oil really starts to heat, with the coil on line all the time it has to take a lot more miles. This was the main reason I fitted the bypass around the cooler. Being dry sumped its all in the tank that actually gives just a tad more cooling on start up as the oil is only briefly in the warming engine.

 

I am quite sure about the mileage as when I worked locally it was 6 miles each way every day in winter, the car was barely up to temperature when I arrived. I cured this by the stick a bit of cardboard between the oil cooler and the rad. Some days it never did get up to temperature. When the weather man says wind chill factor -15 degrees C that's what the engine thinks as well not really correct but a fair modelling.

 

Still it is a MUCH bigger radiator than the K series also the engine holds more water. The hose connections are also a lot bigger. Think the K series holds less than half the amount of water in the block, very small waterways. If you seen one with the head off the amount of err metal is very minimal and the engine achieves lots of cooling from this fact. No big cast iron heat sink, my AX being the heaviest block.

 

You also need to consider that engine mass... that takes more heating than the K series. My oil system contains more oil than the k series particularly those with the dry sump tank in the bellhousing.

 

To be fair the comments on mileage were when I had a heater and was using it as it was say 2 to -5 degrees C it now warms a bit quicker. Also tends to stay in the garage when its that cold. 😬

 

I am not knocking the Laminovas system anything that heats the oil up quicker is a plus. *thumbup* 😬

 

'Can you hear me running' ......... OH YES and its music to my ears 😬 😬 😬

1988 200 bhp, 146 ft lbs, 1700cc Cosworth BD? on Weber's with Brooklands and Clamshell wings, Freestyle Motorsport suspension.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Dave J

 

I agree with you post.

 

One thing you missed was if the oils that hot and thin or getting thinner its more likly to blow past the piston rings and foul the plugs. *eek*

 

'Can you hear me running' ......... OH YES and its music to my ears 😬 😬 😬

1988 200 bhp, 146 ft lbs, 1700cc Cosworth BD? on Weber's with Brooklands and Clamshell wings, Freestyle Motorsport suspension.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...