Quote:
Originally Posted by Ant
When you start a dry sump engine there is potential for the oil cooler to fail due to a problem when the oil from the oil tank drains into the engine by gravity and the oil tank level can be high enough to cause a head, and on startup the scavenge sections suck an amount of cold oil from the oil pan and force it through the oil cooler, I have seen it on several F5000 etc race cars with blown oil coolers, scavenge oil can be harder on coolers than having the cooler on the pressure side. A way to fix this problem is a bypass valve before the cooler diverting the excess oil directly to the oil tank, or fit a thermostat so oil is diverted to either the oil tank or if on the pressure side to the main oil gallery without going through the cooler.
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interesting, so it's the 3+ scavange sections putting an unbipassed solid wall of oil through the lines at excess pressure hitting the oil cooler that can kill it?