jessie928 wrote:bogged wrote:rvh96 wrote:you cant by pass the radiator cooler as they remove 10 times the heat of after market cooler these coolers are designed to supplement the radiator cooler not replace it
Andrew when he built his alloy radiator didnt built in tanks for the auto (Petrol 4.2), and the car now runs so much cooler, and the tranny is the same.
the operating temp of a transmission is over 200 degree's
the operating temperature of teh engine is about 100
if you pull the cooler lines out of the transmission you are asking for trouble.
what you need to do is run the cooler inline with the radiator tank, but only use the tank 1 side of a crossflow radiator ( patrol is crossflow) on the hot side.
running before or after the radiator is the question.... only to be answered by a temp sender and guage in the transmission.
Jes
http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/viewtopic ... t=radiator
The main reason I made it is that on slow speed low range and even highway work on the hills the temp gets up there. As soon as I back off the temp falls but I wanted something that just wouldn't get hot and it fitted the bill perfectly. Also the wife and I are buying a caravan and we want the cooling system in top order.
The main problem appears to be from the auto trans coolers in both endtanks radiating heat into the coolant. Easy solution I hear you say, remove them and use an external one. Well, that doesn't quite work as well as it could because the auto needs to run at an optimum temp and not too cold. If it's too cold then the torque convertor lock up won't work.
The best method is to use both radiator endtank trans coolers and an external on as well and that's what I've done.
As far as toughness is concerned, nearly all 4x4 radiators are now aluminium but they use plastic tanks and you'll get approx 4 to 5 years then the tanks will have to be replaced.
But, for cooling ability, aluminium beats brass ones hands down. Have a look at any current Commodore V6 the radiator would be lucky to be 20mm thick and if the system is in good order they have no problems.
I'll be mounting it using original mounts and original fan and shroud assembly as I'm not in favour of electric fans for a 4x4.
I've made provision for 2 extra temp senders, one as the coolant enters the rad' and one as it exits the rad so I can get some accurate differential temps under different ambient and road conditions.
My next project is an intercooler for a turbo/petrol 4 cylinder Jackaroo using a blow through carby setup and a custom aluminium radiator to suit an FJ Holden with a red motor in it.
No rest for the wicked I guess.
Regards Andrew.