With the pusher fan it let's a lot of air through. I think plugging will help. Not running a shroud on the car, see how that goes...Never thought about plugging that gap- the fan shroud covers it pretty well. Is it going to be visible? If not maybe some expandable foam...homemade rubber gasket...or a Sandy Special LOL!
Kirk
Yep, felt a good amount of air as well. I have some of that push on bulb type but will have to see if it even comes close. Might just be a simple strip of rubber on the inside like a flap or something. One thing I was thinking was some foam tubing like A/C line insulation or foam roll bar tube cover. Not sure, but a lot of air from the fan does get wasted for sure.With my configuration the gap was pretty small, but with my pusher fan running I could feel air going through it (instead of through the rad). I used a piece of door seal rubber bulb I had, pressed onto the sheet metal. With yours, not sure. Maybe an aluminum angle riveted to the sheet metal and "aiming" down? Would maybe minimize it to the point of being able to use some foam rubber seal.
Not much room with the thicker radiator as I recall to fit a worthy fan. The amount of room with the Fluidyne is pretty limited, and with a pusher and a somewhat mechanical puller it will be a gamble to see how it will work. I do plan on some rework, this likely will be an area of improvement.@sandy I have to ask .given this is far from a concourse build and you are not running a shroud...why are using a pulley fan? They are the least efficient method...why not mount electric puller fans with their own shroud?
Sandy I'm a little confused... If you have an elec pusher that's blocking flow into the rad...while I understand your point about wanting max flow through the radiator and no obstruction of air passing out it's back.. you are saying your concern is overheating at higher speed... Track day stuff I assume.. that's way more likely to be dependent on the radiator cooling capacity and your discussion of sealing the rad to the body so all.the air passes through..I would think the ram air effect at speed would do way more than the mech fan will pull through... So I would focus more on slower speed cooling.Not much room with the thicker radiator as I recall to fit a worthy fan. The amount of room with the Fluidyne is pretty limited, and with a pusher and a somewhat mechanical puller it will be a gamble to see how it will work. I do plan on some rework, this likely will be an area of improvement.
My initial though was while a shroud can work very well at lower speeds, it's the other end of the spectrum of operations that I was more concerned about, and anything on the backside of the radiator can block some flow. All speculation on my part how it would affect it, but will see how it works. Pretty sure this is a 'winter' car given the net amount of cooling available![]()
I think you might have misunderstood me. I was suggesting no mechanical fan, just have an electric fan on the rear of the radiator ans often they have their own sealed perimeter plastic shroud.The pusher fan is a lot less area than a shroud and mechanical fan blocking the rear.
I have the fan set back on the front a an inch or so on the front, seemed like a good idea to move the fan off the radiator from the cooling article. I really like the radiator set up you did, nice to get rid of the tank and hoses, never thought of that way to notch out for the cap, would be doing something like that if I have to get a wider core conventional radiator. Great idea!Had to crop these to make the import limits happy...
Yeah, I don't think I could fit one in that would be better than the pusher combined with the mech fan. A super slimline might work instead of the flexfan, but would be a lot more work than leaving the flex fanI think you might have misunderstood me. I was suggesting no mechanical fan, just have an electric fan on the rear of the radiator ans often they have their own sealed perimeter plastic shroud.
Either way I'm sure you'll work it out... Lots of tiger guys have been racing and managed to avoid the overheating issues
No offence taken.. just wanted to clarify what I was commenting on.Again, thanks for the comments, don't want to come off too negative, but do really appreciate suggestions!
Sandy
Thanks! I did this build around an off-the-shelf, no mods, Griffin radiator that Amazon delivered right to my door... I will put together a separate post about the stuff I ended up doing. There is a slight gap between the fan and the radiator core, but it's definitely not an inch.I have the fan set back on the front a an inch or so on the front, seemed like a good idea to move the fan off the radiator from the cooling article. I really like the radiator set up you did, nice to get rid of the tank and hoses, never thought of that way to notch out for the cap, would be doing something like that if I have to get a wider core conventional radiator. Great idea!
The trim on the top is nice too, can plug the leak well. I got some bulb shaped trim seal and some square flat seals that I can get most of the way around, I think that can do a lot without much work.
Sandy