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Re: Miscellaneous Thoughts on winter and Mg's

To: Bob Howard <mgbob@juno.com>
Subject: Re: Miscellaneous Thoughts on winter and Mg's
From: Charley & Peggy Robinson <ccrobins@ktc.com>
Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2000 20:52:40 -0600
  Some are thermo controlled, some aren't.  Take the P-51 Mustang,
liquid cooled, dry sump, separate oil and coolant radiators.  Pilot
controls the gross air flow; thermo does the rest.  Howsomevr, these
engines are meant to run at altitudes from 0 to 35K feet.  Brrrrrr....

  CR

Bob Howard wrote:
> 
> On Sun, 16 Jan 2000 20:43:15 -0600 Charley & Peggy Robinson
> <ccrobins@ktc.com> writes:
> > Hmm,
> Charlie,
>   The idea behind covering the oil cooler is that oils perform best
> within certain temperature ranges, even though they are blended as
> multi-viscosity lubricants.
> 20 weight oil is molassas-like at 20 degrees, so getting it to the
> desirable viscosity and circulate in the engine quickly is the goal.  In
> bitter cold weather, the extra cooling of the oil cooler drops the temp
> of the oil below the desired operating range. The sump itself will
> provide sufficient cooling.
>   I have not seen any objective writings on the subject for automobile
> engines, but there is a lot of it published for air-cooled aircraft
> engines. Some planes are set up with shutters that control the air flow
> to and through the oil cooler.
> Bob
> 
> 
> > ---snip--
> > up OK in the winter and cools OK in the summer.  I just can't figure
> > why
> > you have to cover the oil cooler; maybe I should, next cold snap.
> >
> >   CR

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