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Cooling Mod

Discussion in '5th Generation 1998-2001' started by ottawavffer, Jul 10, 2008.

  1. ottawavffer

    ottawavffer Guest

    Just a thought on the whole heating problem how about a plastic vent that not only vents but pulls air into the radiators!

    As it would be attached to the side fairing the 1st finn sits higher then the bottom scouping the air and directing the fresh air directly into the radiator.

    See attached but very rough, very rough drawing!!

    If you have any thoughts or mods to my drawing please let me know.
    I've drew this up to show that not only does it scoup air in at low speeds, but still allows air to be sucked in by the fans when stuck in traffic. But as you can see allows the hot air to escape just as much as the air gets forced in.

    So once again if you have any thoughts or better ideas on this design please all opinions are welcome as we all ride the same machines!

    Cheers
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Jul 10, 2008


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  2. luckyscrewz

    luckyscrewz New Member

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    Might also be worth looking at a way to direct air over the oil cooler which curiously enough is tucked up so high in the body work on my 6th gen that I don't see how any air can *flow* over the fins.

    I thought that my 93 had a small black plastic air dam under the headlights that directed air up to the oil cooler.... any 3rd geners out their that can validate this?
     


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  3. luckyscrewz

    luckyscrewz New Member

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    what about running an inline coolant cooler (I run this on my LT450R) - I believe on the VFR we could run two of these one on each side. They claim a 5-degree advantage with one. At least in theory we could expect a 10 degree decrease in temps with two... though I would be ecstatic with 5-degrees at this point.

    [​IMG]
     


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  4. ottawavffer

    ottawavffer Guest

    As in the drawing the upper finns are curved down toward the rad, so as the air gets pushed in, it also helps push or flow the hot air out and away from the engine. This is of course theory. So basically it scoupes the air in and as it is scouped in the theory is air being scouped in is also pushing the hot air out!
     


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  5. drewl

    drewl Insider

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    My biggest issue is at slow or no speed.
    When riding at a decent pace, the system does it's job.
    When not moving so fast, it heats up in a hurry.
    So...another fan on the opposite side would seem to do the most good for what I have noticed. Or, as others suggested, a lower temp fan switch.
    The fan switch would be easy enough to change, it only screws into the one radiator. The extra fan would be difficult due to the need for another mounting system and wiring and electricity.
     


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  6. ottawavffer

    ottawavffer Guest

    Now granted touch wood I have not had any major heat problems but I thought I would just see what I could do to help vent the engine better. Without adding an extra fan in doing so draining more power from the battery and of course my R/R blowing out on me!

    Cheers
     


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  7. Y2Kviffer

    Y2Kviffer Insider

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    I'm thinking of mounting a small fan in front of the oil cooler and hooking up to turn on and off with the key.
     


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  8. luckyscrewz

    luckyscrewz New Member

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    Thats a great idea... I wounder if a small shroud would be required to improve the efficiency of the fan?

    I also think I am going to pick up two more of the inline coolers and install them on the VFR and see if that helps
     


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  9. mello dude

    mello dude Administrator

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    Hard to tell from your drawing - but if you are forcing air thru the radiators into the engine bay you would be fighting the natural cooling of air in the front and out the sides.

    I have seen some slats across the outside of the radiators sold for the RC51. They are supposed to create negative pressure to the outside and therefore force more air thru the system.

    What are those inline cooler things?

    Drewl - VFR800Canuck added a 3 row oil cooler on his to drop temps - just another idea. Cooler oil could help some. Even add a larger capasity automotive oil filter.
    Still back at the super hawk fan. Did you check the VFRD thread?
    MD
     


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  10. mello dude

    mello dude Administrator

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    Lucky - what are these things? Got a link?

    Thanks,
    MD
     


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  11. powerslave

    powerslave New Member

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    So,are you trying to push the air IN towards the engine through the rads in your design??
    From what I always understood the fairings and side-mounted rads ard designed to scoop air in from behind the front wheel and OUT the side of the fairing.
     


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  12. NorcalBoy

    NorcalBoy Member

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    The issue seems to be that:

    1. Not enough air passes through the radiator when sitting idle or barely moving.......

    2. The auxiliary fan switch fails to engage the fan at a low enough temp, thus the coolant temps become elevated before the fan activates. This issue also makes it harder for the fan to adequately flow enough air to quickly dissipate any additional heat, when not assisted by vehicle movement.

    3. Scoops only work when the vehicle is moving.........

    I believe the answer lies in the fan switch thermo engagement point or the efficiency of the fan.......take a good look at the right side radiator on a 6th gen......try getting a decent fan behind it or in front of it.......not much room to play with there.....
     


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  13. Rev

    Rev New Member

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    If you want it to run cooler at idle or low speed situations, you could replace the fan switch with one that operates at a lower temperature. I seem to recall a thread on this or VFRD a while back about swapping them out and which one to use.
     


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  14. Rustbucket

    Rustbucket New Member

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    IIRC the low temp fan switch was really low - like 187 or so... I'm too lazy to search and make this a genuinely useful post though. :wink:

    It seems to me the fix(es) would be to reverse the direction of the existing fan as has been discussed here and on VFRD, and look into adding a second fan on the right radiator. If you check out performance auto parts sellers like Summit Racing - High Performance Car and Truck Parts | 800-230-3030, there are electric fans available that are less than 2" thick. they come with nifty zip-tie type doodads to attach to the radiator, so mounting wouldn't be a problem.
     


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  15. Fizz

    Fizz New Member

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    I can see that cooler helping under extended durations of high output or excessive sitting, as the coolant may never actually get cool enough to have the thermostat close.

    However, if I understand liquid cooling systems (which I'm probably missing a lot) I think that under normal circumstances, said cooler will make no difference in coolant temperature. The engine and cooling system are designed to operate within certain optimal temperatures; not too cold, not too hot. When the engine/coolant is cold, the thermostat is closed, causing the coolant to not flow and allow the engine to warm the volume of coolant surrounding the heads. Once the coolant reaches the opening threshold, the thermostat opens allowing cool(er) coolant into the heads; this process is essentially rinse and repeat.

    In other words, the thermostat (when working correctly) is going to keep the coolant at the optimum temperature (whatever that may be). The cooler will help dissipate heat once it's built up and the thermostat is staying wide open, but for the most part; the cooler will make little difference.
     


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  16. CARMINE

    CARMINE New Member

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    A simple manual switch. That's the way I have no more problems about temp. with my old '87 VFR. When the temp.gauge is at half scale I turn on the manual switch to activate the fan before to reach the red zone. Simple and efficient, at a very cheap price (the price of an electrical switch). I mounted it in the left front fairing hole. Easy to be reached but hidden.
    Lamps to all VFR owners.
     


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  17. luckyscrewz

    luckyscrewz New Member

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    They were so far as I know designed for quads -- you cut the hose between the motor and the radiator and install the cooler inline (finned aluminum insert)... the piece has cooling fins machined into it which act as a tiny radiator. They seem to do the trick well on my quad (fan kicks on less often) and I assume they would have a similar impact on the VFR. They come in multiple colors which ads a bit of bling while helping cool the motor (at least in theory).
     


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  18. luckyscrewz

    luckyscrewz New Member

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    I bought mine here:

    Rocky Mountain ATV/MC

    Intended use is for a quad... I know my 450 can churn up an amazing amount of heat in a hurry causing the fan to run nearly full time. With this little cooler installed it *seems* that the fan takes longer to kick on and runs less often.

    I need to check the tube diameter to verify that these will fit If so I will be ordering two for my VFR (one for each side)
     


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  19. Rustbucket

    Rustbucket New Member

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    I'm no engineer, but it seems like compared to the oil cooler already fitted, that wouldn't add much additional cooling area... Does your quad have an oil cooler stock? How big is it? I've gotta think that going to a 3-row cooler would be more effective.

    Of course, for $50 bucks someone could always pick up a few and let us know how they work! :biggrin:
     
    Last edited: Jul 11, 2008


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  20. mello dude

    mello dude Administrator

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    Looked at the site - interesting idea. Kind of a in line radiator. Theres no listing of diameters though. Maybe stick one on the cross hose?

    MD
     


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