Dec-28-2017 05:41 PM
Dec-30-2017 05:01 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Water cools down in the radiator and the COOLED water SINKS to the bottom of the radiator..
Just the way gravity works..
Dec-30-2017 04:59 AM
Dec-29-2017 10:32 PM
joshuajim wrote:The temp difference is not that great.
Since the external trans cooler is located in front of the engine radiator, the air going into the engine radiator could be 200 degrees instead of 100 degrees. So how does this improve the engine cooling?
Dec-29-2017 05:08 PM
1320Fastback wrote:
Never bypass the stock radiator cooler. Transmission fluid that is too cold is just as bad as overheated fluid, normal engine temperature is ideal for the transmission fluid.
Dec-29-2017 04:51 PM
badsix wrote:
in cool temps its not going to be a problem ether way. its when your pulling a long mountain pass in the middle of August with the outside temperature around 100 deg. your radiator cooler is already near 200 deg engine temp. then your trans starts to heat up pushing the engine temp up more then external cooler has to take care of both sometimes not being able to handle it. I would think its a good idea to bypass the radiator cooler as they did. that keeps the trans heat out of the radiator and in the axillary cooler.
Jay D.
Dec-29-2017 02:32 PM
marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:Gdetrailer wrote:lawrosa wrote:LarryJM wrote:lawrosa wrote:
Its 8f here in NJ now. If I didnt have the rad cooler the trans would never get warm. In this cold it barely gets over 110f. But if I idle, it warms it up.
The increase in your tranny temp has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the rad cooler which as I said in my original post WILL NEVER WILL WARM THE TRANNY FLUID regardless of how cold it is outside.
Larry
Nonsense.. If I start my truck and not drive it at all the trans temp with come up to engine temp exactly 190f.. So How is my trans warming up??? Its simple matching the coolant temp..
But when moving the coolers come into play. So as you saw in my video I had 230 coolant temps and a 175 trans temp... Because i'm moving and have a massive cooler..
Be aware that the "coolant" temps you are reading are from the engine block, not the radiator. Typically the coolant temp sensor will be near where your upper radiator hose attaches to the engine which also is where your Thermostat lives..
Coolant temp at the top of the block AND radiator will typically MUCH hotter than the bottom of the radiator and block..
So, you can easily have 230 reading on the top of the engine and 210-220 at the top of the radiator and only have 190-200 at the bottom of the radiator and block..
Top of engine block retains more heat due to large metal mass than the top of the radiator (small metal mass)..
Water cools down in the radiator and the COOLED water SINKS to the bottom of the radiator..
Just the way gravity works..
You can prove that theory the next time by adding a few remote thermometer sensors.. One at the top of the radiator and one at the bottom..
While you are at it, do the same with transmission lines..
The results will be a surprise to you that your large extra external cooler is shedding only 10-30 F..
Yes, shedding even 10 degrees F can help prolong your transmission life so it is not all that bad of an idea, but overall not always going to help.
Not quite sure about your cold water sinks deal since most radiators are cross flow design now.
I have always wondered however what the delta is between the hot water tank side of the radiator @ ~200F and the cold return side of the radiator after the air has cooled it...
My extra large trans cooler (6.0 diesel) was 3 times larger than the OEM 7.3 cooler. Before towing up big mountains at 110F ambient was 225F and now it is NEVER over 165F ever. That is a 60 degree difference, so they do work but its all about size and design.
Dec-29-2017 02:11 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:lawrosa wrote:LarryJM wrote:lawrosa wrote:
Its 8f here in NJ now. If I didnt have the rad cooler the trans would never get warm. In this cold it barely gets over 110f. But if I idle, it warms it up.
The increase in your tranny temp has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the rad cooler which as I said in my original post WILL NEVER WILL WARM THE TRANNY FLUID regardless of how cold it is outside.
Larry
Nonsense.. If I start my truck and not drive it at all the trans temp with come up to engine temp exactly 190f.. So How is my trans warming up??? Its simple matching the coolant temp..
But when moving the coolers come into play. So as you saw in my video I had 230 coolant temps and a 175 trans temp... Because i'm moving and have a massive cooler..
Be aware that the "coolant" temps you are reading are from the engine block, not the radiator. Typically the coolant temp sensor will be near where your upper radiator hose attaches to the engine which also is where your Thermostat lives..
Coolant temp at the top of the block AND radiator will typically MUCH hotter than the bottom of the radiator and block..
So, you can easily have 230 reading on the top of the engine and 210-220 at the top of the radiator and only have 190-200 at the bottom of the radiator and block..
Top of engine block retains more heat due to large metal mass than the top of the radiator (small metal mass)..
Water cools down in the radiator and the COOLED water SINKS to the bottom of the radiator..
Just the way gravity works..
You can prove that theory the next time by adding a few remote thermometer sensors.. One at the top of the radiator and one at the bottom..
While you are at it, do the same with transmission lines..
The results will be a surprise to you that your large extra external cooler is shedding only 10-30 F..
Yes, shedding even 10 degrees F can help prolong your transmission life so it is not all that bad of an idea, but overall not always going to help.
Dec-29-2017 10:16 AM
Dec-29-2017 10:14 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:lawrosa wrote:LarryJM wrote:lawrosa wrote:
Its 8f here in NJ now. If I didnt have the rad cooler the trans would never get warm. In this cold it barely gets over 110f. But if I idle, it warms it up.
The increase in your tranny temp has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the rad cooler which as I said in my original post WILL NEVER WILL WARM THE TRANNY FLUID regardless of how cold it is outside.
Larry
Nonsense.. If I start my truck and not drive it at all the trans temp with come up to engine temp exactly 190f.. So How is my trans warming up??? Its simple matching the coolant temp..
But when moving the coolers come into play. So as you saw in my video I had 230 coolant temps and a 175 trans temp... Because i'm moving and have a massive cooler..
Be aware that the "coolant" temps you are reading are from the engine block, not the radiator. Typically the coolant temp sensor will be near where your upper radiator hose attaches to the engine which also is where your Thermostat lives..
Coolant temp at the top of the block AND radiator will typically MUCH hotter than the bottom of the radiator and block..
So, you can easily have 230 reading on the top of the engine and 210-220 at the top of the radiator and only have 190-200 at the bottom of the radiator and block..
Top of engine block retains more heat due to large metal mass than the top of the radiator (small metal mass)..
Water cools down in the radiator and the COOLED water SINKS to the bottom of the radiator..
Just the way gravity works..
You can prove that theory the next time by adding a few remote thermometer sensors.. One at the top of the radiator and one at the bottom..
While you are at it, do the same with transmission lines..
The results will be a surprise to you that your large extra external cooler is shedding only 10-30 F..
Yes, shedding even 10 degrees F can help prolong your transmission life so it is not all that bad of an idea, but overall not always going to help.
The results will be a surprise to you that your large extra external cooler is shedding only 10-30 F..
Yes, shedding even 10 degrees F can help prolong your transmission life so it is not all that bad of an idea, but overall not always going to help.
Dec-29-2017 09:29 AM
lawrosa wrote:LarryJM wrote:lawrosa wrote:
Its 8f here in NJ now. If I didnt have the rad cooler the trans would never get warm. In this cold it barely gets over 110f. But if I idle, it warms it up.
The increase in your tranny temp has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the rad cooler which as I said in my original post WILL NEVER WILL WARM THE TRANNY FLUID regardless of how cold it is outside.
Larry
Nonsense.. If I start my truck and not drive it at all the trans temp with come up to engine temp exactly 190f.. So How is my trans warming up??? Its simple matching the coolant temp..
But when moving the coolers come into play. So as you saw in my video I had 230 coolant temps and a 175 trans temp... Because i'm moving and have a massive cooler..
Dec-29-2017 09:01 AM
Dec-29-2017 08:53 AM
Tyandkate wrote:
So question for everyone thanks so much for the advice. I’m going to get this fixed ASAP in the next couple of days I do have some work I’m going to have to use my truck for not pulling the camper but a trailer of 1000 pounds or so. Will this current set up be okay for the time being not driving over 60 miles or so?
Dec-29-2017 08:37 AM
LarryJM wrote:lawrosa wrote:
Its 8f here in NJ now. If I didnt have the rad cooler the trans would never get warm. In this cold it barely gets over 110f. But if I idle, it warms it up.
The increase in your tranny temp has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the rad cooler which as I said in my original post WILL NEVER WILL WARM THE TRANNY FLUID regardless of how cold it is outside.
Larry
Dec-29-2017 08:33 AM
Tyandkate wrote:
I’d love to know how you added that transmission temp guage it looks factory.
Dec-29-2017 08:26 AM