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  #41 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 12:43 AM
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I have a 427 side oiler in my 1992 Classic. I have a five core cross flow rad. Bulit by Ron Banks a nas car guy. The shrounding should not have made things worse. I think someone else said how inportant it was to shroud the front also so all the air goes thru the rad. I put on the biggest fan i could get for got how much it flows. The expanison tank on the ford is part of the cooling systems and should be full. I ran the overflow hose to another expanison tank that has to be as high or higher than the the motors expansion tank, it doesnt take much water lose thru the overfow vent each time you shut the motor down to cause a low water problem, that why a another expansion tank is good idea.. I also cut the back of my wheel wells in front of the pipes to let more air flow by the exhaust pipes. The pipes should be coated to cut down on radant heat. The only other thing is my rad. seat straingt up as yours is tilled back. If any thing my runs cold. Also you really need a oil cooler and a seven qt. oil pan. which cuts down on heat. I run Amsoil oil and there coolant. Good luck.

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Old 06-01-2009, 01:44 AM
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Are you absolutely sure that P/N 8805 Victor Edelbrock water pump is what you have and is for counterclockwise rotation? I have read of mislabeled waterpumps. Most pumps are for clockwise rotation. Also make sure to get the air out by unscrewing the temperature sensor on top of the intake manifold next to where the thermostat housing is and with the stopped engine wait till water comes out there.
Maybe I am reiterative on this, but having the wrong waterpump is after all what you have tried the only option left coming to my mind.
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Old 06-01-2009, 08:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew Teal View Post
I think someone else said how inportant it was to shroud the front also so all the air goes thru the rad. I put on the biggest fan i could get for got how much it flows. The pipes should be coated to cut down on radant heat. Also you really need a oil cooler and a seven qt. oil pan. which cuts down on heat. I run Amsoil oil and there coolant.
I am running ceramic coated headers and pipes and the front is completely shrouded on sides and bottom. I am using an 8 quart Armondo road race pan and though I don;t have an oil cooler, it is not going to solve this problem because a.) the oil is not heating up past the coolant and b.) Having an oil cooler will not help when sitting still (unless I add fans to it too.)

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Are you absolutely sure that P/N 8805 Victor Edelbrock water pump is what you have and is for counterclockwise rotation?
Yes, absolutely positively without any shadow of a doubt, its an 8805.
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Old 06-01-2009, 08:22 AM
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This may have already been explored or ruled out but I had a similar overheating problem caused by a lean condition, mine was a damaged fuel line but could you have a lean idle circuit that is causing the overheating? I spent 2 summers fighting my problem talking to experts all the time but until I found the fuel problem nobody suspected the A/F mixture.
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Old 06-01-2009, 09:49 AM
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Based on the spark plugs, if anything I am right on a idle and slightly rich at mid and WOT.

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Jim
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Old 06-01-2009, 10:11 AM
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You have been methodical and seem to have a firm grasp on how everything is built or needs to function. I went back to the beginning to re-read all that has been done. Many good suggestions have been added by the gang but you are in the same place so back to basics.

Ron Davis is local for me and taught me a few tricks or system checks. All coolant systems works best under pressure and a magic number seems to be 12.5 PSI as the MIN. and that is easy to verify (a fuel pressure gauge works great). As a tool only install a gauge in the manifold somewhere as a system check. Use water and additives to lube as well as an anti-corrosion agent as I don't agree with the 100% coolant suggestion but water for test period will work fine. You tested T-stat and all flow related items but pressure will be a sanity check. This leaves the engine and it runs well with good looking plugs but a lack of timing would not show up under tests you mentioned. You mentioned No Pinging etc... I know you verified timing against the marks but go 1 step more. I would be tempted to roll in initial timing until it rattled or bumped against starter then check to see what timing marks are showing again as a sanity check. If you have 45* you know the marks are wrong somehow, you could do a piston TDC stop and check marks that way too???? Your A/F ratio looks good and engine runs good but if timing marks are off by 20+ degrees retarded you may not know it on a new install and that would be easy to miss.

The waterpump and pulleys were covered, I use 15% overdriven as the minimum and 20% is even better for pulley ratio. You can look for more issues with fans and all that but if it overheats at hi-way airflow with shrouding on the inlet side and any fan working on puller side I would suspect engine caused issue. How about some new photos of rad inlet/outlet sides with shrouding?
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  #47 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 10:43 AM
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El;

I've used thermostats just like the ones in your photo.. While the gold one on the left may be the best flowing, I've had the worst luck with them.... I've had the best luck with the el-cheapo Auto Zone ones in 180 degress like the 2 on the right, I would also suggest 4, 1/8 holes in the thermostat flange......I always test them before installing them in water just as you did and let them cycle 3 or 4 times just to be sure..... had one last year that opened and closed perfectly the first time and on the second cycle as it was closing it closed "off center" and was stuck at about 25% open...

Was has me puzzled is the "boiling" back of the water in the expansion tank, that ain't good........

On my Mustang, I run the 180 thermostat with 4, 1/8 holes and an 17inch diameter electric fan (curved blade, they work better than straight blades I've found) with a manual on/off switch....On the highway I never have to turn on the fan, the car will run 180 degrees as long as I'm going 40 mph or more no matter the outside temp. In city driving I leave the fan on and it may creep up to 185 in prolonged stop/go traffic, but that's about it....

I'm running a 351-W and a larger radiator than you have,so we're not comparing apples to apples here....

My radiator and motor combined hold somewhere between 3 and 4 gallons, I think.....

I would try the water restictor instead of a thermostat, just to eliminate the thermostat, it's a quick and easy change, as well as a smaller water pump pulley or larger crank pulley....

I'm like vettestr, I'd like to see some pics of the front of the car as well as from inside looking at the back of the radiator.....

Something just doesn't add up.....Your set-up should work without any problems as I've seen smaller radiators/fans and the cars ran o-k temp. wise...........

I don't recall seeing it, but are you running a puller or pusher fan??both????Pusher fans in the front may look peroid correct, but actually can restrict airflow,a puller, shrouded fan on the rear are the most efficent and when off, will not restrict airflow nearly as much as a front mounted pusher fan........

David
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Old 06-01-2009, 11:27 AM
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Just a thought...
Assuming the fans are in the engine compartment, they should be "pulling" air into the engine area...
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  #49 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 11:45 AM
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Originally Posted by vettestr View Post
Ron Davis is local for me and taught me a few tricks or system checks. All coolant systems works best under pressure and a magic number seems to be 12.5 PSI as the MIN. and that is easy to verify (a fuel pressure gauge works great).... I know you verified timing against the marks but go 1 step more. I would be tempted to roll in initial timing until it rattled or bumped against starter then check to see what timing marks are showing again as a sanity check. If you have 45* you know the marks are wrong somehow, you could do a piston TDC stop and check marks that way too????How about some new photos of rad inlet/outlet sides with shrouding?
We are testing the cooling system pressure this afternoon and checking for combustion gasses in the coolant. But talk to me more about the timing issue. When I left the dyno we had a timing mark on the balancer with 18 initial and 18 in the advance, total 36. I have since gone up to 20 initial based on changing to the 750 Mighty Demon with 18 additional advance, total 38 by 3k rpms. I am using the aftermarket timing pointer that came from Professional Products with the balancer. It mounts at the 11 o'clock position in the OEM holes and PP says its suitable. So there should be no issues there right? How could timing not be right in this scenario?

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Originally Posted by DAVID GAGNARD View Post
El;

I've had the best luck with the el-cheapo Auto

Was has me puzzled is the "boiling" back of the water in the expansion tank, that ain't good........

I would try the water restictor instead of a thermostat,

I'm like vettestr, I'd like to see some pics of the front of the car as well as from inside looking at the back of the radiator.....

I don't recall seeing it, but are you running a puller or pusher fan??both???? David
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Just a thought...
Assuming the fans are in the engine compartment, they should be "pulling" air into the engine area...
Ordered the restrictor package. I have reinstalled the NAPA t-stat that opened the widest and closest to 180*. Didn't drill more holes, trying to change only one or two things at a time. Refilled with distilled water, headed to the radiator shop for testing. Fan is a 3600 cfm Zirgo puller. Shroud is a JEGS aluminum trimmed to fit tightly and made for 16" puller fans. More pics later today but here's the shroud:

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  #50 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 12:04 PM
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El;

Your on the right track checking the cooling system. The puller fan and shroud could be a problem as I see it in the photo, all the air must past thru the 16" diameter hole where the fan is located, and since the fan itself is shrouded, I don't think you need that real nice aluminum shroud, that could be your problem.....I would remove the aluminum shroud and try it again.....

On my street car as well as my racecar, I use a puller fan similar to yours (slightly larger),but no other shroud other than the one with the fan....At highway speeds, you should have enough airflow to keep the motor cool and as I see it, the shroud would force all the incoming air thru the small 16" diamter fan hole!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

As to the timing that vettestr aluded to, simple check is to bring # 1 piston to TDC and see where your pointer is in relation to the timing marks on the damper, that would check/eliminate that as a cause...

David
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  #51 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 12:13 PM
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Here's picture of my racecar radiator/fan set-up.... use the exact same thing on my street car....The racecar fan is 17" diameter and the street car fan is 19" diameter..... as you can see, plenty of room for airflow at highway speeds with or without fan running......

I think the new shroud is the problem........

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  #52 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 12:25 PM
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El, David is right, the shroud you have is compounding your cooling problems, take it off. In general (with electric fans), the air should flow through the whole radiator when moving and get pulled through the electric puller fan when idling. A tapered shroud (which you don't have room for) might let air move through the radiator and through the fan, but at speed the air hits the flat surface and it just blocks air flow.
On timing, if you have the timing too retarded, it will overheat, particularly at idle. When the mech and vac advance come in at higher revs it will "solve" the problem a bit, but you would likely know something was wrong, 'cause the car would run like a dog if it was that far retarded. Still worth checking...
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Old 06-01-2009, 12:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mr0077 View Post
El, David is right, the shroud you have is compounding your cooling problems, take it off. On timing, if you have the timing too retarded, it will overheat, particularly at idle. When the mech and vac advance come in at higher revs it will "solve" the problem a bit, but you would likely know something was wrong, 'cause the car would run like a dog if it was that far retarded. Still worth checking...
Okay guys, removing the shroud will back me up one notch to where I was last weekend. Car will run great and cool down the road, but will not cool well at slow speeds or idle. Can I safely advance the timing beyond 20*???

So....

Once I remove this shroud my car runs great at 180* down the road, no knocking/pinging/dieseling at shut-down. Car heats up to 110C if left sitting still long enough.

I am headed to do the coolant eval.
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  #54 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2009, 12:41 PM
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Originally Posted by elmariachi View Post
We are testing the cooling system pressure this afternoon and checking for combustion gasses in the coolant. But talk to me more about the timing issue. When I left the dyno we had a timing mark on the balancer with 18 initial and 18 in the advance, total 36. I have since gone up to 20 initial based on changing to the 750 Mighty Demon with 18 additional advance, total 38 by 3k rpms. I am using the aftermarket timing pointer that came from Professional Products with the balancer. It mounts at the 11 o'clock position in the OEM holes and PP says its suitable. So there should be no issues there right? How could timing not be right in this scenario?
Hey THE,
You do have fact she was run on the dyno to confirm timing is correct but in the world of Hot Rods who knows. With aftermarket covers, bolt on pointers not to mention distributor in and out a few times all is possible. I am sure not questioning anybodies abilities or smarts, throwing ideas out over the net only. I have seen 4 ways the marks can be wrong and just want to eliminate the possibility $hit happened.

You know what sounds right or more important what way off sounds like. Reach up and grab a handful of distributor and throw an extra 10 or 15 degrees in her as a sanity check only. Blirp the throttle off idle and listen for crisp response or a lazy lay-down response. Set the initial timing by ear and get it to rattle a little under load of lugging the engine ( put in 2nd gear when you should be in 1st gear and let engine pull a little) all at low safe RPM's . Set it by ear to a few degrees below where it wants to rattle and it bumps against the starter when hot, not hard or long enough to hurt anything of course. Then when you find that point check to see what the timing marks are telling you. If the numbers show about what you would expect great, if not you need to find out why. Either way it is fast, easy and cheap way to eliminate a lot of weird but possible problems.

I know it should be and probably is right but a lack of advance would sure cause this grief. A quick double check is what I was suggestion to just take a bunch of things out of the picture since you have done the normal stuff.
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Old 06-01-2009, 12:41 PM
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If the timing is retarded the engine will run very hot. Check to ensure that your aftermarket pointer is right. Also make sure your fan is wired right and is pulling, not pushing.


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Old 06-01-2009, 12:53 PM
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I was off line while a few posts came in... David G is right about a TDC on piston and look at marks. I just find it easier to listen for rattle but either way.

007- I am not sure being retarded some amount on a new build would be that easy to know/catch. Maybe it would just run that much quicker as it is all new to him??

I agree the shroud does look restrictive but should work great at an idle???
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Old 06-01-2009, 12:57 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by elmariachi View Post
Okay guys, removing the shroud will back me up one notch to where I was last weekend. Car will run great and cool down the road, but will not cool well at slow speeds or idle. Can I safely advance the timing beyond 20*???

So....

Once I remove this shroud my car runs great at 180* down the road, no knocking/pinging/dieseling at shut-down. Car heats up to 110C if left sitting still long enough.

I am headed to do the coolant eval.
Since your main problem is stop/go traffic, add another fan just like the one you have in the rear, but to the front of the radiator, pushing........I did this on my street car for parades, I added a 12" fan (cause I had one)(I'd go bigger,at least 16") and reversed the wiring so it pushed thru the radiator, helped tremedously while doing 45 minute to one hour parades on the Forth of July when the outside temp was 100 degrees!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Put the puller fan to one side and the pusher fan to the opposite side of the radiator and I think you'll be fine is city driving.......

Your radiator is not as large as I would like to see, but that's all you can use on your car, so you need to increase low speed airflow, the only way is to add more fan/fans........

Looking back, your radiator is the same as both my cars,cept mine are 28" wide instead of 27" like yours, not enough to worry about..... I would suggest putting the 16" fan you have in the front, pushing and get a 17" fan like in the picture I posted and put it in the rear pulling, that with a change of pulleys and you should be good to go.........

BTW: put the front fan on a manual switch and use as needed.....Not sure how your prsent fan is wired,but I keep mine on manual switchs, I don't trust those automatic switches to come on.......

David
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Old 06-01-2009, 02:13 PM
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I have been reading through this thread and wanted to correct some of the information and provide some of the solutions that have worked for my FE in trying to resolve this same problem.

Note: Your problem as has been mentioned appears to be air flow at lower speeds. Your fan & shroud appear to be fine at 3600CFM and the diameter does not seem to be an issue at 16". I would suggest checking or lowering your fan relay settings, using a manual switch when you get into traffic and reducing your T-stat to allow more cooling margin and possibly adding pushers to help at lower "city" speeds.

I started to write my findings and then I found the article that applys and provides the tech data (though it was written for Jeeps it did a better job than me). cooling article

here's another article on "coolant" coolant article

Bottom line that worked for me:

-25% "coolant" mixture (note that water is best for disapating heat but it has a lower boiling point which can be raised under pressure (pressure cap) and with the addition of some "coolant" below 50%

-Shrouded fan (I have a Blackmagic 16" 2800CFM) note that CFM is more important than fan diameter

-Manual Fan switch (used in traffic conditions since the "automatic" Blackmagic temp control is a contact type bulb on core and does not come on until the temp is at 200 which doesn't switch on the fan early enough to provide fast cooling

-Pusher fans. These provided an extra 5deg cooling as well as faster cooling

Edelbrock waterpump- the CNC design does provide better balanced cooling in an FE, less cavitation (turbulance at impeller) and did reduce operating temps 10deg.

160 T-Stat- contrary to the article I've found that a 160 provides an extra operating margin for cooling with no downside, I did add a single 7/32 hole.

13lb Rad cap- I've seen folks using 15lb+ but had some concerns about that much pressure and my older expansion tank (see below)

Results are that since making all of these updates to my cooling system my car (FE 500hp) runs at 170 highway and 180city and on hotter 90deg days in city in stopped traffic for 20+ minutes it may get to 195deg. I've been running these updates for 15K miles without any cooling issues......except for a recent pinhole that developed in my expansion tank due to age

good luck,
Mike
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Old 06-01-2009, 03:35 PM
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I think David and Mr0077 have it right. The problem isn't that you added a shroud, it's the size and shape of the shroud that you added that is causing you the problem. Long story short, from the looks of the picture you posted, the rear surface of the shroud is much too close to the back of the radiator, effectively blocking all airflow through the radiator except for the area ahead of the hole for the fan. Effectively, you now have a radiator that is 16" in diameter, the rest of it has blocked airflow.

It was explained to me once that a shroud is in effect a huge sealed plenum behind the radiator. The puller fan creates an area of low pressure in the plenum, which draws air in through the front of the radiator while at less than highway speeds to balance the high pressure in front with the low pressure in back. If the plenum is not large enough (the shroud is too close to the radiator) there is not enough airflow to pull the air through the areas where the shroud is too close to the radiator, so the only airflow you get via the fan is straight through the area directly in front of the fan. This also blocks ambient airflow through the rest of the radiator at highway speeds. This would seem to hold water in your case since now not only is your low speed and stop and go overheating problem still there, but the shroud is also blocking airflow at highway speeds since it has blocked all airflow through the areas where the shroud is too close to the radiator.

Put another simpler way, there are two ways to block airflow through a radiator - you could put a piece of cardboard in front of it., or you could mount the same piece of cardboard tightly behind it. Either way, you cut off airflow through the radiator. In effect you have mounted a piece of cardboard with a 16" hole in it behind your radiator. The shroud needs to be bigger with regard to depth, creating a plenum for air to move. Sorry for the rambling, writing is not my forte, hopefully you get the concept of what I am trying to say. Good luck.
Doug
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Old 06-01-2009, 04:27 PM
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Interesting tidbit of trivia on shrouds...during development of the C2 Corvette (the Stingray), the engineers found that the big block cars would overheat at high speeds. On that car, the air came through two openings below the front of the car, went up then back down through the radiator (that was leaned back at the top similar to some Cobras), then straight back toward the motor-driven fan. Because of the long nose and the engine setback, it had a shroud that was about 10" at the top and about 26" at the bottom. The engineers found that at high speeds the fan acted as a plate and would restrict air flow between the radiator and the fan. They came up with two fixes, one was shroud flaps that were pressure operated and the other was shroud flaps that were thermo operated...in either case, the flaps would open up to let air OUT of the shroud when needed for air flow and better cooling. Both ideas were nixed by the bean counters as unnecessarily expensive and complicated...
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