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if your radiator is clean fresh and new your temps will go down without a thermostat but if your radiator is partially fouled/plugged that the thermostat would provide the service of keeping coolant in there longer to allow the inefficient radiator a better chance/more time to reduce temps??? Could this be one reason we are seeing results that support both???
More time in the radiator cooling, the more time in the motor heating....
Argg is right. More flow = more cooling.
This is why they make higher speed fans.
This is why they make high flow pumps.
Something else is going on....
...conduction through the cylinder walls, cylinder heads, etc. weren't mentioned because they don't change when you take out your thermostat.
Mike
I think that is " slowing the coolant flow down". That was mentioned by someone...Although I skimmed through most of the post, I did not see anyone mention heat transfer by conduction through a cylindrical wall which takes time into consideration. Contact time will affect heat transfer.
It most definitely does, if you look at the formula Q(heat) changes when there is more contact time with the water or less. So wouldn't Q(flow) affect Q(heat)?
I'm now going to pour some synthetic oil into my engine and ponder whether or not I should install a BOV...
Mike
I mentioned the IC in the GNX because it has more fins than a regular IC. McLaren did that so the air does not pass through too fast, ie. increase contact time.
Sorry, I don't agree with this at all. The GNX intercooler has more fins to increase the surface area of the IC. As a side benefit, more fins will give the IC more mass, so there will be more thermal inertia to absorb heat from hot charge air under transient (i.e. launch) conditions. More surface area equals more heat transfer, all other factors being equal. Think about it, if you slow the air down, it will get hotter before it exits the IC.
Using your argument that slowing the cooling fluid down is GOOD - well, everyone should block their radiators and disconnect their fans, right? That would increase the time that the air is in contact with the radiator and intercooler, right?
The only time slowing the fluid down improves heat transfer (in the incompressible range) is when you slow it down enough that a phase change (such as boiling) takes place. As I'm sure you know, turning water into steam sucks a lot of heat out of whatever metal it's touching. That's why slowing down water from a boiler might result in more heat transfer. The coolant in an engine should be far enough below the boiling point that minimal if any boiling occurs anywhere in the circuit. Having said that, in some cases, there might be some boiling going on that skews the results - I've mentioned that caveat in my posts.
When I start getting the "you're just one of those theoretical guys who can't do anything practical" BS, it's time for me to bow out. People who say stuff like that don't know me very well. There's a time and place for practical, and there's a time and place for theoretical. I've managed to do both in my life. Just because I have an engineering degree doesn't mean I can't change my own oil.
Mike
^Well there's the problem. This is the internet and the internet is in 'Merica!! We use 'F(merican) here not 'C(andian) !!
You're apples and oranges!![]()