Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

One of my cars that has a dry sump oil system takes for ever to get the oil temps up to the engine operating temperature. The oil system holds about 12+litres of oil as the tank is mounted at the opposite end of the car than the engine, and it uses a -16AN size supply line and a -12 return.

Ive read that nascar use heaters mounted inside their tanks to bring the oil temps up faster when they are pitting the car, but based on what ive researched the heater elements are setup to operate off mains power (110V in the US).

I was thinking about nitrous bottle heaters... and having had no experience with these types of heaters before I figured I'd ask, how hot do these things get, and would it be viable to use a bottle heater to bring the oil temps up faster?

Edited by GTRNUR

We use one of the american heaters for the speedcar dry sump tank. We just have a converter for it. Plug in your regs 240v and it will step down to 110v for the heater pad. Works well!

The lube heaters are the go... but without 'more' plumbing and potential leaks the nitrous bottle heater idea is great.

Once I get back to Tassie, I'll be installing block heaters for lube oil and coolant- for pre start. They are fairly common in colder climate european countries, mercedes has been doing them for years.

The nitrous bottle heaters are just resistantnce heaters in a silicon matt, that are wrapped around the bottle. 12V anything upto 30A. The good one's will be controlled by a pressure switch and realy.

I would be very simple to controll the on/off with a temp switch or ecu output.

Install would be quicker too.

... I like it!

Ha ha

Justin

Sorry Ill be more specific, its a Moroso heater pad to wrap around your dry sump tank. Same as what Justin is referring too.

Sounds similar to a nos bottle heater then.

Ive heard you have to be careful with some of these heaters too, as they can get that hot they tend to burn things they are touching. (though the guy that told me that also sniffs paint, so i'll take that advice carefully). I like the sound of a blanket heater compared to an internal element heater too.

Found the Moroso heater... cheap too.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/NEW-720w-OI...eQ5fCarQ5fParts

I think Ive just worked out why heaters are all 110v. You can only get 300w 12v heaters, so i'd need 4 of them to make a worthwhile heater system. Thats 4 x about 25a current, which would cripple the electrical system pretty well if the heaters were run for the first few minutes of the car running. So that rules out car powered based heating.

Edited by GTRNUR

I can get 240v heaters made to fit up like the moroso element style ones, I can even specify how many watts per inch so it wont burn anything. I get these heaters made all the time to heat water and oil all the time at work. I am actually getting a price on one for a friends drys ump on his 355 holden motor.

I think u would burn the shit out of the oil at that wattage on such a small element, not to mention if you make it you can get the correct fitting to screw into a standard peterson tank etc.

Water boils at 100c and they take what 2 minutes to heat water to this with 1L capacity?

If you are pumping 12L of oil and circulating it you wouldn't burn it.

But you only need it to be on when your in the pits and waiting to go out. Once you start racing for the day, you dont need it again after that. Usually the engine oil will hold its temp for ages. Especially when you have so much of it. Unless your oil cooling system is super good and it keeps your oil cool even during a race then id say you would need it inbetween also.

Yeh you need an external power supply for any of the decent heating pads as I was suggesting in my first post. You just leave the silicon pad attached to your tank with the plug ziptied up somewhere and then you just plug it in when you want to use it. It weighs bugger all too.

Edited by r33_racer

Sounds like mains powered heaters are the go, and I can then wrap the tank in a heat insulation beanie to hold in the heat. I might be able to wire 2 of them in series as my tank is pretty tall, and then wire them direct to 240 instead of using a step down transformer too.

Thanks for the info everyone.

Probably not. The best 12V nos bottle heaters are only 250-300w.

Assuming 100% efficency @ 250-300 watt that is 20-25 amps of current. The 110v heaters are 720watt each, so i'd need 2 -3 heaters to achieve the same level of heating, which equals 60-75 amps of current draw when the heaters are on.

Add that to having to run the rest of the car's ignition, efi etc and it would be overloading the electrical system pretty badly. I think a well insulated tank will do the trick for my application once its up to temp.

  • 1 year later...

After much thought and a much needed break from working on the "other car".... I have had a idea. Its a little out there, but so are some of my other idea's.

Typically the exhaust manifold of a car reaches over 100 degrees inside of 10 second of running, and a front pipe would be well over 400 degrees after about a minute of driving. Some cars use exhaust heat to warm manifolds and provide heat for the car's interior. I figure that while the temps involved are way too high for oil to heat directly, an indirect approach if properly controlled could work.

So here's the idea...

Steam to Oil Heat Exchanger.

Obtain a water-oil heat exchanger from an RB26. Mount it on an external filter style plate, so that there is a means of getting oil in and out of the heat exchanger easily with AN fittings. This unit would then be plumbed into the return line to the tank, before any engine thermostat and coolers.

Exhaust heat coil.

Next, I would get some 3/8" copper tube and wrap it around the front pipe a few time before the CAT (directly after the turbo's). The pipes would then extend up a little and be terminated with braised/silver soldered on AN fittings. The front pipe could then be header insulation wrapped to help keep the heat in.

Coolant resivour.

A small coolant resivour tank would be needed, and would be mounted about the same height as the engine (say near the ABS booster). The tank would hold about 200ml of water, so a greddy style radiator header/air extraction tank would be about perfect, as it has a radiator cap which would help release pressure. It also provides a means of the system replentishing its water supply when it cools down, same principal as a radiator/engines cooling system does due to thermal contraction when cooling.

Electric control of the heat transfer.

An electricly operated solenoid would be connected to the bottom most outlet on the tank as a means of controlling coolant flow. The solenoid would be controlled by a thermal switch to turn it off at 80 degrees oil temp. The solenoid outlet would then be connected to one side of the heater coil around the front pipe. The "out" side of the heater coil would connect to the coolant in side of the heat exchanger, and finally the coolant out side of the heat exchanger returns to the header tank.

Convection steam pumping.

The theory is that when the solenoid is on, gravity feed and convection pumping will provide the flow. The water falls to the heater coil where it will boil virtually instantly. Then as steam builts it will shoot up to the heat exchanger where it will heat the oil, and condense as it returns to the header tank. This is basically the same approach as is used to cool the bearing housings on water cooled turbo's.

I figure that when it is operating the steam temperatures will be pretty extreme, approaching 250 degrees, but this won't burn the oil. Once the solenoid turns off, the heater coil will boil dry eventually and convection pumping will stop. The system will still have some pressure in it maintained by the header tank spring loaded cap, but no pumping will occur anymore.

Since the heater coil and oil heat exchanger are sufficently isolated no more heat will transfer to the oil. The copper will handle the exhaust temps fine as it softens with heat, and will not melt at the peak temps of about 700 degrees that the front pipe occasionally sees.

Does this sound practical and reasonable? Thoughts... opinions.. suggestions? Fire away.

Edited by GTRNUR

good idea but a little complex. having a 240V or even a 110V element or wrap type heater is much easier and certainly proven to work. same as R33 racer the ones i've used had a screw in element in the tank (and used the wrap/blanket type too) and were powered off a step down transformer. the advantage is very little gear in the car (so not much added weight), just the element and it's plug. all the rest of the stuff can live in your garage or be taken with you to any race meets etc. in your climate I imagine you'd only ever need to use it in the morning and the car would be good for the rest of the day even with on/off driving.

the advantage to your system I guess is it's powered by EGT so it's free. :)

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

    • Did this end up working? Did you take some pictures?
    • And finally, the front lower mount. It was doubly weird. Firstly, the lower mount is held in with a bracket that has 3 bolts (it also acts as the steering lock stop), and then a nut on the shock lower mount itself. So, remove the 3x 14mm head bolts , then the 17mm nut that holds the shock in. From there, you can't actually remove the shock from the lower mount bolt (took me a while to work that out....) Sadly I don't have a pic of the other side, but the swaybar mounts to the same bolt that holds the shock in. You need to push that swaybar mount/bolt back so the shock can be pulled out past the lower control arm.  In this pic you can see the bolt partly pushed back, but it had to go further than that to release the shock. Once the shock is out, putting the new one in is "reverse of disassembly". Put the top of the shock through at least one hole and put a nut on loosely to hold it in place. Put the lower end in place and push the swaybar mount / shock bolt back in place, then loosely attach the other 2 top nuts. Bolt the bracket back in place with the 14mm head bolts and finally put the nut onto the lower bolt. Done....you have new suspension on your v37!
    • And now to the front.  No pics of the 3 nuts holding the front struts on, they are easy to spot. Undo 2 and leave the closest one on loosely. Underneath we have to deal with the wiring again, but this time its worse because the plug is behind the guard liner. You'll have to decide how much of the guard liner to remove, I undid the lower liner's top, inside and lower clips, but didn't pull it full off the guard. Same issue undoing the plug as at the rear, you need to firmly push the release clip from below while equally firmly gripping the plug body and pulling it out of  the socket. I used my fancy electrical disconnect pliers to get in there There is also one clip for the wiring, unlike at the rear I could not get behind it so just had to lever it up and out.....not in great condition to re-use in future.
    • Onto the rear lower shock mount. It's worth starting with a decent degrease to remove 10+ years of road grime, and perhaps also spray a penetrating oil on the shock lower nut. Don't forget to include the shock wiring and plug in the clean.... Deal with the wiring first; you need to release 2 clips where the wiring goes into the bracket (use long nose pliers behind the bracket to compress the clip so you can reuse it), and the rubber mount slides out, then release the plug.  I found it very hard to unplug, from underneath you can compress the tab with a screwdriver or similar, and gently but firmly pull the plug out of the socket (regular pliers may help but don't put too much pressure on the plastic. The lower mount is straightforward, 17mm nut and you can pull the shock out. As I wasn't putting a standard shock back in, I gave the car side wiring socket a generous gob of dialectric grease to keep crap out in the future. Putting the new shock in is straightforward, feed it into at least 1 of the bolt holes at the top and reach around to put a nut on it to hold it up. Then put on the other 2 top nuts loosely and put the shock onto the lower mounting bolt (you may need to lift the hub a little if the new shock is shorter). Tighten the lower nut and 3 upper nuts and you are done. In my case the BC Racing shocks came assembled for the fronts, but the rears needed to re-use the factory strut tops. For that you need spring compressors to take the pressure off the top nut (they are compressed enough when the spring can move between the top and bottom spring seats. Then a 17mm ring spanner to undo the nut while using an 8mm open spanner to stop the shaft turning (or, if you are really lucky you might get it off with a rattle gun).
    • You will now be able to lift the parcel shelf trim enough to get to the shock cover bolts; if you need to full remove the parcel shelf trim for some reason you also remove the escutcheons around the rear seat release and you will have to unplug the high stop light wiring from the boot. Next up is removal of the bracket; 6 nuts and a bolt Good news, you've finally got to the strut top! Remove the dust cover and the 3 shock mount nuts (perhaps leave 1 on lightly for now....) Same on the other side, but easier now you've done it all before
×
×
  • Create New...