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-   -   PWR Charge Cooler Project--Pics (https://www.rx7club.com/3rd-generation-specific-1993-2002-16/pwr-charge-cooler-project-pics-406376/)

fro 09-17-05 05:57 AM

first post! woo (I've been lurking for a long time)

Here's some pictures of my water to air install in a FD.
The charge coolers have advantages and disadvantages to a FMIC.
Advantages are (in the case of the PWR barrel coolers) :
High flow potential.
Extremely low pressure drop across the core.
only a small proportion of the main cooling radiator is obscured by the additional charge cooler radiator (I see the same temps with the charge cooler as with the original SMIC)

The disadvantages are
the air temps coming out of the cooler aren't as low as a large fmic. This is mainly to do with the short core of the cooler. The tuner who supplied my cooler has measured drops of 80 degrees(C) though, which is pretty amazing considering the size of the core.
They can be a pain in the ass to completely bleed the air out the system. My system will be self bleeding once I replace the bleed screw with a line back to the filler though.
There are no specific kits for the FD, all the pipework and brackets have to be fabbed.

There's quite a few people in the UK with these coolers now, some of which are nurburgring regulars so they've been extensively tested with long periods of WOT :)
My car's off the road at the moment as I'll be installing a T04Z in the next couple of weeks.. it will be interesting to see how the cooler performs with lower temps going into it (my twins are shot)

http://www.zen44871.zen.co.uk/Pictures/W2AInstall/

AndrewDevlin 09-17-05 07:58 AM


Originally Posted by M104-AMG
Yep, air-to-water, intercooler are VERY efficient, just a bulky package. They are the "secret" to the forced-induction Mercedes out today. Also, if you use your own water-supply (he tapped into the engine cooling system), you can even be more efficient.

What I'd like to do, is have an Air-to-water exchanger made in the shape of the stock intercooler, and place the radiator of it on the side without an oil-cooler on my touring FD, for more stealth . . .

:-) neil

i have two queries here,

one. why use the water from the engine cooling system? the temperatures are in excess of 80 deg C, so unless the temperature of the charged air is above this, no heat rejection will take place from the air, in any case, its most likely to go the other way with the air getting hotter

two. try explaining to me how you can design a water to air cooler to the same shape as an air to air. think of it this way: the outside air (air-air) is a free commodity; the water isnt (water-air), you have to recover it, basically the most effective design is the barrel when it comes to water-air coolers

Kento 09-19-05 11:33 PM


Originally Posted by AndrewDevlin
in reply to kentos post about it creating additional time, i dont believe this is true, you are still using the same conduction transfer medium (aluminium) and any slight increase in time will be neglagible considering the wall thickness are < 1mm

your most likely going to be worried about the transient effects of water temp build up which is a function of 'its' own cooler and its volume... ie can your water maintain its temperature over its period of use

That's what I meant about the "time" factor; the water can absorb four times the amount of heat that "air" can, but shedding that heat (the process in reverse) takes time unless you have a huge heat exchanger that is well ducted and a good amount of water volume-- adding weight and bulk to a system that could function just as well with an air/air IC.

Originally Posted by fro
High flow potential.
Extremely low pressure drop across the core.

That's because the barrel-type extractors are so short. However, they still will outflow a fin or bar-type air/air IC because of the straight-thru design.

Originally Posted by fro
(I see the same temps with the charge cooler as with the original SMIC)

Are you saying you're seeing the same IATs as the stock IC? If so, no offense, but that's a lot of complexity for not a lot of payoff...

Originally Posted by M104-AMG
They are the "secret" to the forced-induction Mercedes out today.

The "secret" is that the reason Merc uses the air/water IC is due to packaging concerns. Especially with their supercharged AMG models, where the design of the supercharger precludes fitting any other type of IC between the blower and the intake manifold.

KevinK2 09-20-05 09:31 AM

Translations:

Originally Posted by fro
(I see the same temps with the charge cooler as with the original SMIC)

Kento, he was talking engine coolant temps.

"why use the water from the engine cooling system"
AD, he was just saying put the aux exchanger to the side, where an atx oil cooler (or 2nd R1 oil cooler would be. He did not say use engine cooling sys.

----------

I have posted the benefits of a/l IC's for the FD with a small stock front bumper opening. The PWR gives very low pressure drop, which is critical in getting the most from stock turbos.

The mistake most make is in using an inefficient high pressure oil cooler for the aux unit up front. A well designed, multi pass 3/4" core water based radiator up front, about the size of the condensor, would allow steady state efficiencies better than any SMIC, but not as high as FMIC's. The aux rad up front would be less of an airflow restriction, vs a fmic, so cooler engine temps would be seen at track events, vs fmic.

Kento 09-20-05 07:42 PM


Originally Posted by KevinK2
Kento, he was talking engine coolant temps.

:doh::dunce:

APEXL8T 09-21-05 09:06 AM

1 Attachment(s)
air to water

M104-AMG 01-28-06 11:36 PM


Originally Posted by APEXL8T
air to water

Tells us more about this setup, esp. who supplied/made it ?

:-) neil

M104-AMG 01-09-09 11:57 PM

1 Attachment(s)
pics for posterity sake.

:-) neil

TimeMachine 01-10-09 12:24 AM

Fascinating... :noyes:


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