Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > Lets talk gearbox oil coolers... |
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DMRR Member Since: 14 Apr 2010 Location: Northamptonshire Posts: 2027 |
Wait for the ECU to scream and die Land Rover Addict
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28th May 2012 3:58pm |
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Richcl Member Since: 23 Sep 2010 Location: Tewkesbury, Glos Posts: 1011 |
Fisha,
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28th May 2012 4:04pm |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1350 |
was that in addition to the exchanger or as a replacement V8 or else ... |
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28th May 2012 4:55pm |
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Richcl Member Since: 23 Sep 2010 Location: Tewkesbury, Glos Posts: 1011 |
Replaced, as they cant guarantee any debris from gearbox failure will not be in original cooler, plus it's an upgrade and keeps oil cooler. |
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28th May 2012 5:04pm |
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Richcl Member Since: 23 Sep 2010 Location: Tewkesbury, Glos Posts: 1011 |
Here's a link.
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28th May 2012 5:14pm |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1350 |
Interesting ... and confirms it can be done.
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28th May 2012 5:38pm |
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Richcl Member Since: 23 Sep 2010 Location: Tewkesbury, Glos Posts: 1011 |
Mine were disconnected, although at first it was joined with a length of pipe to complete the curcuit, this caused over cooling (mentioned in another thread), I removed this tube and blanked the ends, to stop the flow and the over cooling.
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28th May 2012 7:49pm |
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jim2RRs Member Since: 07 Feb 2012 Location: Genesee, Colorado Posts: 147 |
Fisha:
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29th May 2012 11:40pm |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1350 |
Was actually considering 2 of them plumbed in series, one above the other sitting at the bottom front area of the radiators. The leccy fan looks like it sits away from the condenser by about the right amount. This would mean that I would fit one in the open space at the bottom and one above it which would get some cooling from the fan when it switches on ( which is quite regular if the engine is upto temp and the air con on ) It would also get air drawn through it by the main viscious fan .
Pushing heat into the coolant is what I dont want. A seperate mod I am considering is to change the thermostat to an BMW M5 one to bring the stat temp down from 105°C to the more normal 90° range to give me more temperature overhead for towing. Reading the RAVE manual, warm up mode is below 60°C and high temp is in the 120-124°C range - thats quite a range that the gearbox considers as normal temp. I think I would have to do a significant amount of cooling to bring it down anywhere near 60°C. At the same time, I dont see the point of heating it up to 105°C by the coolant if the gearbox isn't working the fluid to that temp. V8 or else ... |
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30th May 2012 12:29pm |
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jim2RRs Member Since: 07 Feb 2012 Location: Genesee, Colorado Posts: 147 |
Recalling from the P38 that the engine oil cooler and trans oil cooler are different sizes, use whichever is: A. cheaper B. larger Don't forget to account for the additional volume of oil needed to fill those coolers.
That's a pretty big temperature change. Presumably, the ECU will deal appropriately with the change? Why does it run so hot? An emissions thing?
Warm-up simply changes the shift patterns to delay upshifts a bit; I can't imagine that creating a problem. Of all the issues on my P38, my only trans problem has been a leaking trans oil cooler! Replacing it was easy enough. And now that I think of it, I'm due for a trans oil change in all 3 vehicles. At least the Grand Cherokee has a dipstick to fill instead of crawling under the truck. Speaking of changing trans oil... When I replaced the cooler in the P38, I obviously had to top up the trans oil. I had 1 of those pump things that was supposed to go on the top of the oil container; it was a PITA. So, I went to the home & garden center & bought a sprayer thing; a 1-gallon plastic container with a pump & a 3-foot hose with a spray nozzle. Removed the nozzle, filled with ATF, pumped it up. Inserted the end of the tube into the fill hole, squeezed the trigger, ATF into trans! WAY easier than messing around any other way I've found. It leaks a little at the trigger when its pressurized, but still less ATF on the garage floor than the previous method. [edit to add:] Sprayer like this one Jim 2000 NAS HSE 2005 NAS HSE |
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30th May 2012 2:31pm |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1350 |
AFAIK, its an emissions thing ... higher temp = better emissions The normal stat runs at 105° under normal load conditions, then when the engine ECU thinks that its under high load, the engine will use an additional electric stat ( its all part of the same thermostat unit ) to open up extra flow to the radiator to provide additional cooling. I had considered sending a signal to force the electrical stat open all the time, but through that would burn out that part of it. Its a good idea ... but ... I dont like the idea of it running so high. I would be looking to use the transmission cooler from the 2.5 diesel P38 ( the engine oil cooler is smaller ) ... it has its outputs at the same end so I could make them the same side as the heat exchanger. V8 or else ... |
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30th May 2012 3:37pm |
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jim2RRs Member Since: 07 Feb 2012 Location: Genesee, Colorado Posts: 147 |
This doesn't make any sense. First it says raising the coolant temp has beneficial effect on fuel consumption & emissions, then it immediately says thermo with higher constant temp could cause poor response when accelerating and in traffic. Not helpful. Is the M5 stat physically the same as the RR stat? Including the heater connector? The "electric" part of the stat is actually a heater, to force the wax capsule to fully open, rather than an electrically-operated valve. Removing the heat source caused by the trans oil "cooler" should reduce the engine coolant temperature. Just doing this might give you a bit more temperature headroom for towing. Jim 2000 NAS HSE 2005 NAS HSE |
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30th May 2012 4:13pm |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1350 |
the M5 stat is different. the L322 stat is all one part of the hose connector bit that bolts onto the water pump. an M5 stat is like a normal engine stat which sits sandwiched inbetween the hose connector and the pump.
It'll remove a heat source, but wouldn't stop the stat keeping the temp at 105° Also, when peering through the grill, there looks to be various flaps on the front of the radiator which block direct air flow through unless travelling at speed. Seems pointless to block airflow. V8 or else ... |
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30th May 2012 5:39pm |
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jim2RRs Member Since: 07 Feb 2012 Location: Genesee, Colorado Posts: 147 |
Good point. If you remove a 200C heat source, it should be "easier" to hold the coolant at 105C. Which implies more cooling capacity for the coolant. right? Then the engine merrily putts along at it's designed 105C, without being impacted by how hard you happen to be working the trans. Jim 2000 NAS HSE 2005 NAS HSE |
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30th May 2012 7:24pm |
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