<VV> LM turbos and no lower shrouds
Eric S. Eberhard
flash at vicsmba.com
Mon Oct 24 20:48:08 EDT 2011
I don't think we disagree :-) I am a turbo owner most of the time
(don't actually have one now). It will run cooler without
shrouds. No argument. The argument is whether that is a good thing or not ...
The question is -- will it run consistent temperatures? Will it warm
up fast enough? Will it ever run too cool (oil temps under
220)? Will anything be damaged by hot engine parts getting soaked in
cold water. How do like all that dirt and crud all over parts of the
engine never designed to be exposed? Throw a rock, bend a pushrod
tube, lose an engine?
And I guess it depends on your definition of "adequate" is ... mine
is within the range on the gauge and not popping off the idiot light!
The gauge on a Spyder ranges from 200 to 600 ... and generally "in
the middle" is what is considered the normal operating range. So 400
is certainly not too hot. If your car runs at 300, that is awfully
cool and is costing you mileage. If you are driving around town and
it is under 220 you are sludging your engine horribly. If you are
425-450 you are still close to the center of the gauge and I think
that is fine -- 350-450 is pretty normal, I would not get excited
even 25 more degrees from that.
You might want to go drive it at 300 for a while, then stop, and use
a heat measuring gun on the oil filter. I bet you are under 220 and
you are damaging your engine by being too cool. Also, I bet you
drive hard part of the time, and like a commuter most of the time. I
bet you have wide swings in temps (shoot it with a heat gun). That
also is very hard on the engine.
All I am saying is that cooler is not always better and it is easy to
keep a stock car where it belongs by leaving the stock cooling system
alone. If you modify it, carefully consider the cooling mods as part
of the project.
E
At 05:23 PM 10/24/2011, jvhroberts at aol.com wrote:
>As a turbo owner, I'd have to say you're dead wrong. Mine definitely
>ran cooler with the lower shrouds removed, and even then, adequate
>is NOT a word I would use! These cars can always use more,
>especially at prolonged full power.
>
>John Roberts
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Eric S. Eberhard <flash at vicsmba.com>
>To: jvhroberts <jvhroberts at aol.com>; virtualvairs <virtualvairs at corvair.org>
>Sent: Mon, Oct 24, 2011 5:36 pm
>Subject: Re: <VV> LM turbos and no lower shrouds
>
>
>I really think that a stock engine with the stock cooling is more
>than adequate. In fact, I would bet money that a stock engine with
>stock cooling runs COOLER than one with the shrouds removed. And I
>dare you to drive spiritedly and get that lower part really hot and
>then splash through some cold water. And, I really like my heater in
>the winter.
>
>You don't get much worse (for straining the cooling system) than the
>spirited driving in AZ where 105 is common, 120 happens .... I never
>had cooling problems even on steep grades. I drove my little Spyder
>30k miles and it never complained. I've gone over 100 mph in that
>car when it was over 100. My coupe has A/C and PG and I can drive it
>up a 6% grade with A/C on (which blows ice BTW stock except Sanden
>compressor) at 75 (my engine is tweaked a little, it is a 110 instead
>of 102) when it is 105 out, no problems. In fact in all of my life
>of having Corvairs (including 2 LM turbos and 1 EM turbo) and always
>with stock shrouds, bellows, doors, and very importantly the sealing
>of the engine compartment -- I have never had a Corvair
>overheat. Not even after losing a belt (STOP fast!). In fact, if
>anything I'd complain that it warms up too slow on cold days ...
>seems to take forever even with the doors closed and the summer
>plates off. And I am not in-experienced -- I've had them 35 years,
>10 more years if count the ones I worked on with my grandpa, and I
>have owned as many as 10 at a time, never zero, and currently
>2. Last time I checked I have had more than 30 Corvairs. I actually
>do know what I am talking about. So I will simply have to agree to disagree.
>
>E
>
>At 03:30 AM 10/23/2011, <mailto:jvhroberts at aol.com>jvhroberts at aol.com wrote:
> >Um, the stock system is not all that and a bag o' chips. Sorry. For
> >those of us who have turbo cars, etc., the cooling is utterly
> >inadequate. Removing the shrouds produces a noticeable drop in CHT
> >and oil temperature.
> >Even on a non turbo car, if driven spiritedly, the cooling system
> >runs out of breath.
> >
> >So, there is, in fact a better system out there. GM simply failed to
> >install it!!
> >
> >John Roberts
> >
> >
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: Eric S. Eberhard <<mailto:flash at vicsmba.com>flash at vicsmba.com>
> >To: virtualvairs <<mailto:virtualvairs at corvair.org>virtualvairs at corvair.org>
> >Sent: Sun, Oct 23, 2011 2:30 am
> >Subject: <VV> LM turbos and no lower shrouds
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >I am always puzzled by this discussion which comes up every so
> >often. The car was designed well from the factory. If you have
> >everything correct -- all the shrouds as well as seals and so forth,
> >there is no better system. I am in AZ, totally bone-stock, at
> >altitude (3500-8000 feet), summer temps of 110 ... and I NEVER have
> >even gotten remotely close to overheating. Our speed limit is 75 and
> >I can go up a 6% grade at 80, no over heating. From my 3500 to 7500
> >feet happens in 6 miles, no overheat even at 80.
> >
> >
>
>
>Eric S. Eberhard
>(928) 567-3727 Voice
>(928) 567-6122 Fax
>(928) 301-7537 Cell
>
>Vertical Integrated Computer Systems, LLC
>Metropolis Support, LLC
>
>For Metropolis support and VICS MBA
>Support!!!! <http://www.vicsmba.com>http://www.vicsmba.com
>
>For
>pictures:
><http://www.vicsmba.com/ourpics/index.html>http://www.vicsmba.com/ourpics/index.html
>
>(You can see why we love this state :-) )
>
Eric S. Eberhard
(928) 567-3727 Voice
(928) 567-6122 Fax
(928) 301-7537 Cell
Vertical Integrated Computer Systems, LLC
Metropolis Support, LLC
For Metropolis support and VICS MBA Support!!!! http://www.vicsmba.com
For pictures: http://www.vicsmba.com/ourpics/index.html
(You can see why we love this state :-) )
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