Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hey guys, i have had the priveledge of meeting a guy by the name of John Bennet, who has worked on most engines imaginable, including RB20, 25, 26, 30 & SR's etc

He is well known for most things he has done, building thousands of modified water pumps for different vehicles through his company ecotrans (i think based out of tullamarine). I also believe he founded Advanced Vehicle Technologies, who have developed a way to convert diesel engines to run on LPG, i have seen a John Deere engine that he modified, and he CNC machined a bolt on housing and drive assembly to convert the injector pump drive to run a common falcon Distributor. but enough about the man.

1). Now he re-manufactures water pumps that look more like the impellor on a Industrial pump. They are designed to catch the water and forward it on without cavataing the water against the cavity in the block. (i will post up a pic of an impellor shortly).

2). He also specialises in setting up individual cylinder bleeds that are tapped into the head above the exhaust ports, and in are designed to bleed any pockets of air/steam that become trapped in the cylinder heads especially around the exhaust ports, and bleed them and any coolant into a custom seperator / breather tank system.

Now when i said RB25 he said yeah, no problems. He has heads of most vehicles cut up to locate the water galleries etc.

I believe his theories are on equalising head temperatures, eliminating hot spots and creating thermal efficeincy within an engine. He said he has done a fair bit of work on RB and SR engines with great success for track etc.

My question is if i have no real cooling issues present (have Nismo thermostat, 50mm koyo radiator, silicone hoses etc). I like things be precautious and if i can help my engine last a little longer and produce a little more consistant power, then i'll be in on it. I don't know how ineffective RB cooling systems are or are not, but i have seen them capable of allot more power than i have. I just thought the better cooling above the exhaust valve guides might make them less likely to crack and etc as they seem to be prone to.

In a topic i previously read regarding cooling and mentioning Johns work:

http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/Co...wer-t62818.html

Skylinekid

The N1 water pump is not designed to stop cavitation, it is designed to slow dow nthe movment of water at high rpm. The race teams found that with the standard pump the water moved so fast around the engine that it didn't absorb the heat. So they came up with a "cut back" style of water pump that slowed the water movement down. This is good for a circuit race car that has sustained high rpm, but not so good for a road that sees lots of low rpm. I would never put an N1 pump in a car that sees any road work.

My thought was, prehaps one of these pumps with a larger pully to slow it down a bit.???

Just wondering if anyone knows anyone who has used any of his products on RB's or SR's, or if anyone uses them themselves, or if anyone else has thoughts on the subject.

I would like to add, respectfully, that the cooling system is not exactly a weak spot for an RB. While improvements can be made, there are very basic steps that are fairly cheap to accomplish this.

Furthermore, cracking valve guides is not a common occurrence so I would have to ask why you are worried about them cracking.

I have seen bronze guides fail on 5 laps of QR in 4 or more different cars but never ever seen the cast guides crack. If they have been setup incorrectly or something else in the valvetrain comes adrift, then maybe.

Under drive pulley will achieve the same result as an N1 water pump.

and Redline Water wetter will decrease the surface tension of the water by decreasing cavitation.

Look i mean i am not set on the idea, and i respect everyones opinion, my thoughts are that if it will help, even in a small way, while john is workign up my way, it might not be a bad idea. It is not very expensive for the work on the pump, and they are a great design. I will post pics as soon as i can.

Cheers

rough figures, i was indicated around $250-300 for the pump, thats impellor & heavier bearings installed, and once you see the work that goes into the impellor you will understand why that is cheap.

I would be guessing on the head work, but it isn't a real big job, i will find out.

The only reason i put it on here is because he tries to keep out of the lime-light, he has half dozen people he has never met ring him a day, and his current companies main work is in research and development for companies like BMW, Merc. etc. so he only offered me a look in because he carries a small volume interest in this still. I will sus it all out tomorrow.

The interest is great, thanks guys

i run one of his water pumps on my 26. i had alot of trouble controlling water temps until i set up the bleeds in the head. i'm yet to spend time restricting the top hose and playing with pulley diameter to get the right block preasure, but as i'm not having problems with temps any more, it could be a while.

john is an extremely smart man judging by the couple of conversations if had with him, i'd love to talk to him more but he's always extremely busy. if you have the time and money, you should try his ideas, you'll learn heaps.

Edited by DRIFTER

Cracked factory valve guides on the exhaust side are actually quite common. It's more so the brittleness induced into them by the constant expansion/contraction associated with everyday driving that causes them to crack rather than the constant excessive heat they're exposed to for a relativly short time if they're tracked every now and again.

IMO a setup like this would be benificial but again it comes down to cost vs gains I guess...

Did the guy do any datalogging with tempurature probes tapped into each water jacket with a before and after result? This would be a good way of predicting actual gains associated with the setup :D

Just my 2cents

I would like to add, respectfully, that the cooling system is not exactly a weak spot for an RB. While improvements can be made, there are very basic steps that are fairly cheap to accomplish this.

Furthermore, cracking valve guides is not a common occurrence so I would have to ask why you are worried about them cracking.

I have seen bronze guides fail on 5 laps of QR in 4 or more different cars but never ever seen the cast guides crack. If they have been setup incorrectly or something else in the valvetrain comes adrift, then maybe.

Under drive pulley will achieve the same result as an N1 water pump.

and Redline Water wetter will decrease the surface tension of the water by decreasing cavitation.

Thanks for the comments guys.

I might just bite the bullet, i will definatly report back with pics and prices tomorrow.

Also drifter, can you post up some pics of the bleed set-up you run.

Cheers

Cracked factory valve guides on the exhaust side are actually quite common. It's more so the brittleness induced into them by the constant expansion/contraction associated with everyday driving that causes them to crack rather than the constant excessive heat they're exposed to for a relativly short time if they're tracked every now and again.

IMO a setup like this would be benificial but again it comes down to cost vs gains I guess...

Did the guy do any datalogging with tempurature probes tapped into each water jacket with a before and after result? This would be a good way of predicting actual gains associated with the setup :)

Just my 2cents

I've pulled apart many many many RB's, 99.9% being daily drivers between 7-20 years old and have never ever seen a cracked cast valve guide.

Not saying it doesn't happen but if it were common, then I'm sure I would have come across it by now. Also, the engineer I use (Chilton Engineering) does all the engineering work for Marty white, Chapman, GT Auto, BTT, and many others who all deal in RB's and he has never seen a cracked guide either...Not one single guide in 20 years. Worn guides yes, cracked..no.

Once again, not saying it can't happen or doesn't happen, just saying it's not a 'common fault'

Alright, why does this always happen? 3lit3 32 thanks for your input, but this thread is not about weather cracking valve stem guides is common or not, i just know that the last 2 heads i had rebuilt, (a 25 & a 26) that the on both, it was only the exhaust valve guides that needed replacing, and on both heads some were worn and some were cracked. I know heaps of others who have come across the same thing. Maybe our rebuilders just want a few extra bucks, who cares, but this thread is mainly about an alternative cooling system.

I am sure that there is another thread to argue out your concerns

Cheers

I've pulled apart many many many RB's, 99.9% being daily drivers between 7-20 years old and have never ever seen a cracked cast valve guide.

Not saying it doesn't happen but if it were common, then I'm sure I would have come across it by now. Also, the engineer I use (Chilton Engineering) does all the engineering work for Marty white, Chapman, GT Auto, BTT, and many others who all deal in RB's and he has never seen a cracked guide either...Not one single guide in 20 years. Worn guides yes, cracked..no.

Once again, not saying it can't happen or doesn't happen, just saying it's not a 'common fault'

im doing an engine now where the guides were cracked...and its not the 1st time ive seen it.

Alright, why does this always happen? 3lit3 32 thanks for your input, but this thread is not about weather cracking valve stem guides is common or not, i just know that the last 2 heads i had rebuilt, (a 25 & a 26) that the on both, it was only the exhaust valve guides that needed replacing, and on both heads some were worn and some were cracked. I know heaps of others who have come across the same thing. Maybe our rebuilders just want a few extra bucks, who cares, but this thread is mainly about an alternative cooling system.

I am sure that there is another thread to argue out your concerns

Cheers

Considering you were the one who brought it up, I think it is very relevant. You are talking about spending hundreds on a water pump to fix a supposed problem that really isn't there. I understand that these modified pumps do a much better job than the factory items when there is a need for this type of thing, but you asked for opinions, and my opinion is the same as 2LV8ETR - If it aint broke, don't fix it.

Sure there is a place for this type of equipment, but so is there a place for using dry sump and external oil pump setups. DRIFTER seemed to have problems setting it up, which tells me that it's not something that just anyone can do as a simple, effective upgrade.

It is impressive gear regardless, but you wanted peoples opinion and mentioned a 'common problem' as a good reason for upgrading. Without this 'common problem' there is no real reason for the average person to need it, so you will primarily be targeting a racer market.

Both of the track cars I sponsor use an aftermarket alloy radiator (one uses PWR, the other - cooling pro from Justjap), a normal genuine water pump and normal off the shelf thermostat. 4 - 5 rounds on the race track with 20-30 minute breaks in between each round, in summer, and both of them maintain temps below 88deg.

Once again, though, impressive product. It's good to see people thinking outside the box to make things better for all of us.

I've been running a JB modified head on an L28 in the Z-car for longer than most here have had their licence. Actually, I've improved on his original design because the whole thing was a bit experimental and crude. It's all about uniform coolant flow and certainly will have little (more likely none) impact on any valve guide cracking (I have serious doubts about this being a common problem).

Please everyone forget the valve guides, my main goal with this project is for thermal efficiency across all my cylinders, to try and even out cylinder head temperatures on the exhaust side in particular, and if that helps any part of my engine, including valve guides last a bit longer, well then fantastic. It really is just improving on an already good cooling system.

I am in my lunch break, and heading down now.

Cheers

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • The other problem was one of those "oh shit we are going to die moments". Basically the high spec Q50s have a full electric steering rack, and the povo ones had a regular hydraulic rack with an electric pump.  So couple of laps into session 5 as I came into turn 2 (big run off now, happily), the dash turned into a christmas tree and the steering became super heavy and I went well off. I assumed it was a tyre failure so limped to the pits, but everything was OK. But....the master warning light was still on so I checked the DTCs and saw – C13E6 “Heat Protection”. Yes, that bloody steering rack computer sitting where the oil cooler should be has its own sensors and error logic, and decided I was using the steering wheel too much. I really appreciated the helpful information in the manual (my bold) POSSIBLE CAUSE • Continuing the overloading steering (Sports driving in the circuit etc,) “DATA MONITOR” >> “C/M TEMPERATURE”. The rise of steering force motor internal temperature caused the protection function to operate. This is not a system malfunction. INSPECTION END So, basically the electric motor in the steering rack got to 150c, and it decided to shut down without warning for my safety. Didn't feel safe. Short term I'll see if I can duct some air to that motor (the engine bay is sealed pretty tight). Long term, depending on how often this happens, I'll look into swapping the povo spec electric/hydraulic rack in. While the rack should be fine the power supply to the pump will be a pain and might be best to deal with it when I add a PDM.
    • And finally, 2 problems I really need to sort.  Firstly as Matt said the auto trans is not happy as it gets hot - I couldn't log the temps but the gauge showed 90o. On the first day I took it out back in Feb, because the coolant was getting hot I never got to any auto trans issues; but on this day by late session 3 and then really clearly in 4 and 5 as it got hotter it just would not shift up. You can hear the issue really clearly at 12:55 and 16:20 on the vid. So the good news is, literally this week Ecutek finally released tuning for the jatco 7 speed. I'll have a chat to Racebox and see what they can do electrically to keep it cooler and to get the gears, if anything. That will likely take some R&D and can only really happen on track as it never gets even warm with road use. I've also picked up some eye wateringly expensive Redline D6 ATF to try, it had the highest viscosity I could find at 100o so we will see if that helps (just waiting for some oil pan gaskets so I can change it properly). If neither of those work I need to remove the coolant/trans interwarmer and the radiator cooler and go to an external cooler....somewhere.....(goodbye washer reservoir?), and if that fails give up on this mad idea and wait for Nissan to release the manual 400R
    • So, what else.... Power. I don't know what it is making because I haven't done a post tune dyno run yet; I will when I get a chance. It was 240rwkw dead stock. Conclusion from the day....it does not need a single kw more until I sort some other stuff. It comes on so hard that I could hear the twin N1 turbos on the R32 crying, and I just can't use what it has around a tight track with the current setup. Brakes. They are perfect. Hit them hard all day and they never felt like having an issue; you can see in the video we were making ground on much lighter cars on better tyres under brakes. They are standard (red sport) calipers, standard size discs in DBA5000 2 piece, Winmax pads and Motul RBF600 fluid, all from Matty at Racebrakes Sydney. Keeping in mind the car is more powerful than my R32 and weighs 1680, he clearly knows his shit. Suspension. This is one of the first areas I need to change. It has electronically controlled dampers from factory, but everything is just way too soft for track work even on the hardest setting (it is nice when hustling on country roads though). In particular it rolls into oversteer mid corner and pitches too much under hard braking so it becomes unstable eg in the turn 1 kink I need to brake early, turn through the kink then brake again so I don't pirouette like an AE86. I need to get some decent shocks with matched springs and sway bars ASAP, even if it is just a v1 setup until I work out a proper race/rally setup later. Tyres. I am running Yoko A052 in 235/45/18 all round, because that was what I could get in approximately the right height on wheels I had in the shed (Rays/Nismo 18x8 off the old Leaf actually!). As track tyres they are pretty poor; I note GTSBoy recently posted a porker comparo video including them where they were about the same as AD09.....that is nothing like a top line track tyre. I'll start getting that sorted but realistically I should get proper sized wheels first (likely 9.5 +38 front and 11 +55 at the rear, so a custom order, and I can't rotate them like the R32), then work out what the best tyre option is. BTW on that, Targa Tas had gone to road tyres instead of semi slicks now so that is a whole other world of choices to sort. Diff. This is the other thing that urgently needs to be addressed. It left massive 1s out of the fish hook all day, even when I was trying not too (you can also hear it reving on the video, and see the RPM rising too fast compared to speed in the data). It has an open diff that Infiniti optimistically called a B-LSD for "Brake Limited Slip Diff". It does good straight line standing start 11s but it is woeful on the track. Nismo seem to make a 2 way for it.
    • Also, I logged some data from the ECU for each session (mostly oil pressures and various temps, but also speed, revs etc, can't believe I forgot accelerator position). The Ecutek data loads nicely to datazap, I got good data from sessions 2, 3 and 4: https://datazap.me/u/duncanhandleyhgeconsultingcomau/250813-wakefield-session-2?log=0&data=7 https://datazap.me/u/duncanhandleyhgeconsultingcomau/250813-wakefield-session-3?log=0&data=6 https://datazap.me/u/duncanhandleyhgeconsultingcomau/250813-wakefield-session-4?log=0&data=6 Each session is cut into 3 files but loaded together, you can change between them in the top left. As the test sessions are mostly about the car, not me, I basically start by checking the oil pressure (good, or at least consistent all day). These have an electrically controlled oil pump which targets 25psi(!) at low load and 50 at high. I'm running a much thicker oil than recommended by nissan (they said 0w20, I'm running 10w40) so its a little higher. The main thing is that it doesn't drop too far, eg in the long left hand fish hook, or under brakes so I know I'm not getting oil surge. Good start. Then Oil and Coolant temp, plus intercooler and intake temps, like this: Keeping in mind ambient was about 5o at session 2, I'd say the oil temp is good. The coolant temp as OK but a big worry for hot days (it was getting to 110 back in Feb when it was 35o) so I need to keep addressing that. The water to air intercooler is working totally backwards where we get 5o air in the intake, squish/warm it in the turbos (unknown temp) then run it through the intercoolers which are say 65o max in this case, then the result is 20o air into the engine......the day was too atypical to draw a conclusion on that I think, in the united states of freedom they do a lot of upsizing the intercooler and heat exchanger cores to get those temps down but they were OK this time. The other interesting (but not concerning) part for me was the turbo speed vs boost graph: I circled an example from the main straight. With the tune boost peaks at around 18psi but it deliberately drops to about 14psi at redline because the turbos are tiny - they choke at high revs and just create more heat than power if you run them hard all the way. But you can also see the turbo speed at the same time; it raises from about 180,000rpm to 210,000rpm which the boost falls....imagine the turbine speed if they held 18psi to redline. The wastegates are electrically controlled so there is a heap of logic about boost target, actual boost, delta etc etc but it all seems to work well
    • hahah when youtube subscribers are faster than my updates here. Yes some vid from the day is up, here:  Note that as with all track day videos it is boring watching after the bloopers at the start.  The off was a genuine surprise to me, I've literally done a thousand laps around the place and I've never had instability there; basically it rolled into oversteer, slipped, gripped and spat me out. On the way off I mowed down one of the instructor's cones and it sat there all day looking at me with accusing cone eyes as I drove past. 1:13:20 was my fastest lap, and it was in the second session, 3rd lap.  It (or me!) got slower throughout the day as it got hotter.      
×
×
  • Create New...