In a message dated 3/28/2011 11:48:08 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
cbeazley@innovista.net writes:
Hey
Ernest;
Looks good, but...there are a few things to consider with this
mod from Lynn.
Pro: Improved oil flow and cooling
Con: Any
debris can kill the engine
Any (oil pickup) bolt, bearing debris, or
general crap poured into the engine can lock up the oil pump.
I know of 1
car engine that died after Lynn posted this
mod.
Cheers
Cary
On the other hand, it is not a common practice to drop crap into oil sumps.
And the stock screens quite often pass slivers and shavings that fracture the
pumps. Even so the drawing was published with the bug screen in place, in fact
the drawing shows the screen and anti vortex plate from a Ponitac, as the Mazda
screen would be too small even for a garden tractor.
This came about after a long thing about Mistral overheating their oil.
They took off the bug screen, and ended up making their own pickup from scratch.
With a much improved outcome. They had no screen on the new pickup. The screen
covered the drain-back hole in the surge plate (Baffle plate) between the engine
and the pan. A few powerful magnets around the inside of the pan may save the
day for you. Such magnets are available inside discarded microwave ovens.
Please, no comments that several microwaves have failed after Hanover published
his magnet idea. If you want smaller magnets they are used in outrunner model
plane motors and as clamps for hatches from model supply houses.
I have uncovered 3 fractured rings in stock pumps in engines with the bug
screen in place. None had died from oil pressure failure. The fractures had
smoothed during operation suggesting that the engines had run for good long
times in that condition. The guts are made of powdered metal. You can break
those pumps in a cold start. They are absolute crap, just like all automotive
pumps. But they are good enough if you think about what they are. The racer
has a giant 3 stage dry sump pump, and it even has powdered metal gears.
Loosing oil pressure does not hurt a rotary. Operating the engine at length
with no oil pressure hurts a rotary.
Lynn E. Hanover