OK, I'll bite. How is it that "water that moves too fast will not pick up the heat"? It doesn't make any sense--the faster water moves over a surface, the BETTER it will transfer heat. (I would suppo
Yes, Benn, I am with you. In fact, I think if you look on Stewart water pump web site they even explain this ongoing myth. Here is the deal. Fast water picks up a littl eheat but since th ewater is f
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 16:15:45 -0800 (Pacific Standard Time)
I cannot explain it, I just know that has been my experience. Maybe some of our engineers will jump in here. I'm not the brightest bulb in the chandelier. Tom, Redding CA - #216 D/FCC --Original Mes
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 16:45:03 -0800 (Pacific Standard Time)
OK an engineer stepped up to the plate. As I said, I was using a 20 gallon water tank. Maybe in my case it was cooling too well, therefore the restriction was needed. I still want a thermostat. Heat
This topic reminds me of the first time I ran into this. Shelby was running the Mustang at the Trans-am races at Riverside raceway in Calif. It was the middle of summer and very hot. The motors were
IT should all be about pressure and volume--the pressure cap suppllies only part of the pressure--the rest needs to come from the pump working against restrictions--to keep the steam bubbles supresse
"the rest needs to come from the pump working against restrictions" That is the reason for the "Cool Down Lap" and washers where the thermostat was. -- Smokey Yunick I read that the Honda F1 1500cc