Brooksie
Guru
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2007
- Messages
- 1,327
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Island Seeker
- Vessel Make
- Willard 36 Sedan
This may be of interest to others, I don't know. But for what it's worth:
Two weeks ago I decided to change out my transmission and engine oil coolers due to their age. The engine oil cooler on my horizontal Perkins 6 is in the oil pan/tank & in my installation the tube bundle can't be removed without hoisting the engine, a replacement tube bundle is $1800, and if it leaks seawater enters the oilpan. So instead of the "in-tank" cooler I ordered a 3" x 9" high pressure, cu-ni, external cooler. A homemade bracket, some hi temp oil hose, and a "sandwich" adapter completed the installation. The "sandwich" adapter goes under the oil filter and allows 1/2" in & out oil lines easily to the cooler. The the water was blown out of the old oil cooler & it was capped off.
Now with water and oil passing through the new cooler instead of tubes of water just sitting partly in the oil, my oil pressure is greatly improved from 30 to 40 at cruise and 35 @ hot idle instead of 15 as b/4. I did not change my oil during this conversion. It is now removable and servicable. If it leaks oil will go into the seawater and I will loose the oil but water will not go into the oil pan.
Moral of story: A properly sized & working engine oil cooler can make a big difference in oil pressure.
Two weeks ago I decided to change out my transmission and engine oil coolers due to their age. The engine oil cooler on my horizontal Perkins 6 is in the oil pan/tank & in my installation the tube bundle can't be removed without hoisting the engine, a replacement tube bundle is $1800, and if it leaks seawater enters the oilpan. So instead of the "in-tank" cooler I ordered a 3" x 9" high pressure, cu-ni, external cooler. A homemade bracket, some hi temp oil hose, and a "sandwich" adapter completed the installation. The "sandwich" adapter goes under the oil filter and allows 1/2" in & out oil lines easily to the cooler. The the water was blown out of the old oil cooler & it was capped off.
Now with water and oil passing through the new cooler instead of tubes of water just sitting partly in the oil, my oil pressure is greatly improved from 30 to 40 at cruise and 35 @ hot idle instead of 15 as b/4. I did not change my oil during this conversion. It is now removable and servicable. If it leaks oil will go into the seawater and I will loose the oil but water will not go into the oil pan.
Moral of story: A properly sized & working engine oil cooler can make a big difference in oil pressure.