So irritated...
Sadly, Mazda waterpumps have been NLA for years now, and they no longer supply remans at any rate.
This leaves us two options... One, you buy a new patent-part waterpump. Two, you buy a shady reman. waterpump. I chose the new route, but I am here to discuss the consequences of either choice... Part manufacturers go on about how their new or reman pumps are equipped with the latest impeller designs. What they actually mean by that is to say that they are designed for more efficient 'pumping' of the coolant.. ergo, faster coolant flow. This is a problem. By speeding up the flow of coolant through the system, it does not remain in the radiator quite as long as a good OE pump with an OE impeller. The consequence of this is lack of heat dissipation, and that my friends means warmer coolant temps. My old OE pump, comparing datalogs between it and the 'new' aftermarket pump, averaged 5 to 10 degrees cooler across the range. My temps have risen a majority average of 10 degrees. The temps are more sensitive to even light loads or short bursts of medium to high loads even as ambient air temperatures have dropped significantly. Before anyone anyone asks, I replaced the pump immediately upon spotting that there was a tiny leak. The car did not run any hotter than its usual 185, there was absolutely no measurable loss of coolant, and I stopped driving the car when I spotted the signs of the tiny leak. After replacing the pump with this patent part, I (as anyone should anytime the cooling system is opened for service) pressure tested the system to ensure the new pump or gasket was leaking. It held pressure just fine. The difference between the impellers is pretty significant. The new part is much taller and does not have anything like the same taper of the blades. The design of the impeller viewing it from the top appears very similar, but the blades have much more surface area due to the extra height and lack of taper. I am not amused.. I'm thinking of calling the parts manager of my shop's Mazda vendor armed with part numbers to see if the seals and bearings for the OE pump are still available so I can rebuild my OE unit. |
I would guess that both the seals and bearings are standard metric. You need to get the original ones out and look for a number on all parts and cross reference. If there is no number, ID and OD on the seal and bearing will lead you to a replacement.
|
I do not doubt/question your results but this:
" By speeding up the flow of coolant through the system, it does not remain in the radiator quite as long as a good OE pump with an OE impeller. The consequence of this is lack of heat dissipation, and that my friends means warmer coolant temps. " ...is sheer nonsense. IF the coolant spends less time in the radiator and therefore does not shed as much heat, the coolant is ALSO spending less time in the engine and therefore not picking up as much heat to shed. Your new impellor design is the root of your issue, maybe it's less efficient, maybe it cavitates...who knows? But it's not because the coolant is rushing through the radiator. |
Im going to agree with clokker on this one. If a anything i would have thought faster flow would have a better chance of controlling hot spots and keeping an even temp through the whole block. The coolant is spending just as much time in the rad when you consider its passing tjrough there more often. The problem with too much waterpump speed is risk of cavitation at the impeller.
Fwiw there are after market waterpumps all over the place. Quality and design could be a minefield though.. |
As long as he's using the stock pulleys, the speed of the pump hasn't changed.
Impellor design could be less efficient, but it's spinning just as fast as the OEM pump. First thing I'd do is dump a bottle of WaterWetter in the loop and see what happens. |
The impeller may be spinning at the same speed, but a difference in the design of it to move more coolant wouldn't require it to spin any faster.
I also believe its a lot easier for the coolant to pick up heat in the 'bowels' of the engine and turbo than it is to shed that heat in the radiator. There could be something to the cavitation theory, but I can't think of a way to compare the pumps in that regard. I can't imagine a manufacturer would have altered the impeller design that would move coolant more slowly than the original and call that an improvement. Without hard data, and having compared the two visually, I'm going to stick with more surface area/larger blades = more flow rate. Regardless, this is very irritating. Water wetter should not be necessary now where no problem existed before. |
Im confused, Mazdatrix and Atkins Rotary still sells Mazda Water pumps
|
Both vendors list the OE part number, but that does not mean you're getting a genuine mazda part, unless specified.
I'm sure someone out there has NOS parts, it's a matter of hunting them down. |
Atkin's also has OEM pumps
|
"This is a problem. By speeding up the flow of coolant through the system, it does not remain in the radiator quite as long as a good OE pump with an OE impeller. The consequence of this is lack of heat dissipation, and that my friends means warmer coolant temps"
Common internet myth. Increased coolant flow in a closed loop system provides an increase in cooling capacity, not a decrease. |
You're going to have to back that up with something, because if it is an internet myth, then it's been around since before the internet.
My information on the subject comes from old men who do the american muscle car thing, and technicians at several different dealerships. It's pretty well accepted info. |
"I also believe its a lot easier for the coolant to pick up heat in the 'bowels' of the engine and turbo than it is to shed that heat in the radiator.
"You're going to have to back that up with something, because if it is an internet myth, then it's been around since before the internet. " If you want to relitigate fluid dynamics and physics because some old guy with a Camaro told you to, feel free. That set of conditions leaves you but two options... -Either find an OEM pump, which should return you to the acceptable temps you saw before, or... -Increase the size of your heat exchangers. |
Grumpybutt returns!
Yes, an oe pump design would put my temps back where I had been before. Having to upgrade a radiator to make up for a poor water pump impeller is a little silly. And these old camaro guys' have more than likely built and raced more engines than you've owned, so, nice stab, but it's unwarranted. |
Originally Posted by Acesanugal
(Post 12215681)
Grumpybutt returns!
And these old camaro guys' have more than likely built and raced more engines than you've owned, so, nice stab, but it's unwarranted. Perhaps you'd explain the mechanism that allows your coolant to take on heat efficiently in the engine block but lose the ability to shed the heat in the radiator. |
Physics and fluid dynamics aside, advertizing is advertizing. Their better impeller design means "cheaper to make" and it may not flow as well or cause cavitation at the speed it's running in the pump. Otherwise, it works great at low speeds but may be spun to fast in the RX7 application. I know a bit about manufacturing and they'll use the same impeller in as many pumps as possible. This goes for just about everything.
Out of curiosity, is the impeller cast like the original or is it stamped steel? |
I agree that the impellor design is probably at fault but this: " Otherwise, it works great at low speeds but may be spun to fast in the RX7 application."
Is somewhat misleading because the pump is spinning exactly as fast as it always has been. The impellor design may be less efficient at higher rpm (very likely/possible) but engine speed isn't the problem, the design is. |
My point was if the impeller is somewhat generic and used across different applications, it may not be spun as fast in the other applications. I agree, the pulley ratio did not change.
|
It is a cast impeller.
I'm no science major. I am simply describing my experiences and giving my theories on why the change has occurred. I am basing some of it off of conversations I've had with experienced engine builders (albeit not rotary), what I've read on this forum, and information I sought out on my own using the internet (obviously). The argument of coolant flow vs. heat absorbtion and dissipation seems to go either way... regardless of whatever technical jargon people use to defend either theory or what kind of physicist or thermodynamic engineer these people all claim to be. |
How does it look compared to the factory one? There was a thread in the first gen (I tried, couldn't find it) where someone noticed the impeller on his replacement water pump didn't run as close to the housing as his old one and set out to fix it. He felt it was hurting it's cooling ability.
|
Originally Posted by Acesanugal
(Post 12215675)
You're going to have to back that up with something, because if it is an internet myth, then it's been around since before the internet.
My information on the subject comes from old men who do the american muscle car thing, and technicians at several different dealerships. It's pretty well accepted info. http://stewartcomponents.com/index.php?route=information/information&information_id=14 |
Of course google isn't broken, don't be ridiculous. It's not unreasonable to ask you to provide reasonable proof to back up your opposing theory.
So maybe these 'improved' impeller designs are slowing the flow of coolant rather than speeding them up. Either way, hotter coolant temps vs. the OE pump's results are not a good thing. |
If the company you're buying from is claiming an impeller is more efficient isn't claiming it moves a higher mass flow, its claiming it uses less energy for a given flow than the stock design.
Most of the aftermarket pumps I buy claim to "meet or exceed" oem specifications, which would, of course, meet a flow requirement. |
i have a few remans that have stock impellers, and they haven't leaked.
|
OK. Atkins is OEM for certain. Unless they're printing Mazda stickers which would be pretty dirty.
Impeller design could increase flow. Increased flow is basically guaranteed to raise efficiency. That's how convection works. It's hard to measure flow :/. Maybe you could take the hose off the BAC and floor it and test it that way. See which one gets closer to the garage door haha. Just keep the dog in the house. If you buy one and your temperature moves then you can come back here and tell us all about it. |
I will be hunting down an OE pump at my earliest convenience. Stupid aftermarket. There's a reason I do everything I can to not order aftermarket parts at work.
|
Not all aftermarket is garbage.
AFAIK, Mazda does not make water pumps. So that means they used a reputable company (maybe Koyo would be one of my guesses), with enough experience (design/mfg.), that they felt were good enough. Price was a consideration, of course, but they wouldn't have just chosen the cheapest supplier. We all know plenty of brands that are sold as aftermarket, but that you can get in a Mazda box. Also, I find that lots of people on the forums like to criticize reman/rebuilt parts. They're not all bad. Half the time (not saying this is your case), they find out there was a different cause. They replace a starter or alternator, let's say, and blame the part when the original problem remains. Also, to address the Techs/Builders/Engineers debacle, I think there's not enough respect between each other. They all have valuable knowledge. But often they try to step on each others' toes and people get offended. I think Impeller design is always a compromise, but certain minimums have to be met. Flow and efficiency and cost will vary. Aftermarket companies wish to have a design that works (i.e. not all being returned after a day). Most that have a good reputation want to keep that reputation. They would most likely get an OEM pump and test out flow at various RPM's, and see how much drag spinning the pump places on the engine. You said the pump says it's more efficient, but haven't proven if it flows a certain minimum amount. It is very possible you got a pump that is inferior to the stock, but that would be fine in a system where all the other parts are performing well. It may be (as mentioned) that the particular company in question just used the same impeller as on another model. Getting back on topic, I'm just saying not all aftermarket is bad. What brand pump did you get? |
Cardone. I've used their pumps on other vehicles in the past out of desperation and been fine, but never a rotary. Won't do that again lol
I feel a little silly for quibbling over ten degrees, but my FC is my baby. |
Originally Posted by Acesanugal
(Post 12216214)
Cardone. I've used their pumps on other vehicles in the past out of desperation and been fine, but never a rotary. Won't do that again lol
I feel a little silly for quibbling over ten degrees, but my FC is my baby. I get what you mean. Ten degrees is ten degrees. Any pump should perform at least to a minimum standard. Maybe consider changing the thermostat. If the new pump is not as good as the original, maybe if your thermostat isn't opening completely, now it's making a difference? |
I've used the "new" design pumps, the ones with the stamped steel style impeller. So far I have never personally had a problem. Although, I don't have a data stream or anything to look at...Maybe you could find a machine shop that can "rebuild" your OE style pump?
|
This is beyond too complicated. Put the pump on, get a temp gauge of decent quality and record your operating temperature. You will then have data that will pull you out of this rabbit hole. What kind of efficiency difference are we talking about and is it worth one's time to worry about it? I'd say probably not but if you had a good temp gauge you will witness the difference or you'll see that it's the same and you've been wasting all of this time worrying about the quality of aftermarket parts.
It's like someone said in this thread -these parts have to meet a certain standard to be put on the shelf but like everything else you get what you pay for. Don't go too cheap on the water pump -it's too important. |
Lose the attitude.
I have three references for temperature. Factory gauge. Rtek datalog via a recent temp sensor. Aftermarket electronic water temp gauge. The higher coolant temps are verified. Some of you need to chill the frak out. |
Ok, so what are the differences in temperature? 10degrees?
(I feel a little silly for quibbling over ten degrees) |
Yep, an average of 10 degrees warmer.
And yep, it is a little silly to quibble about a ten degree difference... in *most* cases.. But this is a rotary, and that ten degrees matters a bit more. Clearly you did not read the entire statement before you quoted it. If you aren't going to be helpful, you'd do right to say nothing at all. It has already been determined and I have decided to seek out an OEM pump to replace the aftermarket one I installed. This will guarantee the expected performance. So, just how are you contributing to this thread at this late stage...? |
Have you called Mazda for the part? N326-15-100C is still available.
|
When I called my Mazda dealer, I was told that the part was NLA and had been for some time, with no other dealer in the region showing stock for new or reman.
|
Originally Posted by Acesanugal
(Post 12216572)
When I called my Mazda dealer, I was told that the part was NLA and had been for some time, with no other dealer in the region showing stock for new or reman.
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:03 PM. |
© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands