There is a wide gulf between the calculated heat rejection of any
particular system and the actual performance of that system in real life.
Just ask Mistral. Or anyone else who tried to cool a rotary. As in any car,
the water pump is sufficient to cool the car in Death Valley on the hottest day
of the year, at idle. So, when we spin up the engine to 5,500 RPM and the pump
is spinning 7,000 RPM we can pump a good sized stream of water over a two story
building. Good to know, but how about a radiator. Not quite as good an outcome.
The radiator sharp edged tubes stick up into the manifold and defy fluid flow
through them. Some racing radiators are filled with epoxy right to the tips of
the tubes to provide a very smooth transition into the tubes and flow is
profoundly improved.
So the formula says in part that more flow means more (Better)
cooling, and this is accurate. But when you see that the radiator is the biggest
restriction in the coolant loop you might guess that a low pressure area could
develop between the inside of the radiator and the water pump. And in every case
it dose. So now you notice that all lower (suction side) radiator hoses have a
big spring inside to prevent the hose from collapsing. So, the suction side of
the pump can pull quite a low pressure on that hose, correct? Even with a 22
pound pressure cap and a really big free flowing radiator. There is never more
than 14.7 pounds available to crush that hose, so the pressure inside the hose
must be lower than that by a good margin. And if the pressure inside the hose is
that low, what is the pressure inside the cool side radiator manifold? Notice in
the olden days that the radiator died from the bottom tube ends (up and down
radiators) seem to rot away and leaks at the bottom killed the radiator.
No, it was cavitation.
Also cavitation can kill a pump quickly. It eats away the pump vanes like
acid. Notice that the top hoses are smaller than the bottom hoses?
Could drag increasing at the square of velocity be performing the function
of a..........dare I say restrictor? If the top hose is long enough it has
that effect. Now in the lab and in the drawings all of that fluid is
incompressible. And the surface of the tubes is uniformly exposed to the fluid,
so we predict that at thus and so, a flow rate we expect rejection value X. But
we seem to not achieve value X in actual practice. Because, while the fluid
is very nearly incompressible the air bubbles in the fluid are easily
compressed, and thus allow for volume changes, and then for both high and low
pressure to exist in the same closed system.
Removing the radiator as the biggest restriction in the circuit just about
eliminates suction side cavitation. So I installed a restrictor in the water
outlet of 5/8" diameter. It is welded in place. It never changes. Been doing it
since 1980. Have yet to overheat a rotary. Have never lost a water pump or
radiator.
I would not use that small a restrictor for 5,500 RPM. Probably way too
small. My engines were used between 7,500 and 9,600 RPM. This with the small
crank drive pulley and the stock water pump pulley.
What I have deduced from this may be completely wrong. But, it does work
for me. Or, perhaps my system is so overly large it is just tolerating my
folly.
Lynn E. Hanover
In a message dated 7/28/2011 10:51:23 A.M. Paraguay Standard Time,
eanderson@carolina.rr.com writes:
I saw Lynn’s coolant diagram with a restrictor plate in
it … you guys with evaporator cores and 1” coolant hoses have a 1”
restriction, this based on Mazda’s design of 1.5” inlet/outlet on the stock
water pump and the stock design includes a thermostat. With all of that
as a background (never had a thermostat), I decided to try a restrictor plate
in my coolant system, using a 0.75” hole in a plate at the water pump
outlet into my 1.5” radiator hoses. I can say that it doesn't do any
harm and may have actually provided about 5% improvement … more testing to
follow.