Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 Going to fit a head cooler to my turbo GS over the winter,the oil flow will go as in the pic below,so oil to cooler out of cooler to sump as its going to be mounted behind my battery box,does the oil return need to be below the oil level or can it drain from a higher point on the sump? Anyone forsee any issues? Quote
davecara Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 (edited) Y Piece to cooler then return to the head Edited September 25, 2023 by davecara 1 Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 Hmm might have to have a rethink then Quote
imago Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 11 minutes ago, davecara said: Y Piece to cooler then return to the head Was there a sale on somewhere for fittings when that was done? 3 Quote
Gixer1460 Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 27 minutes ago, Paulm said: Going to fit a head cooler to my turbo GS over the winter,the oil flow will go as in the pic below,so oil to cooler out of cooler to sump as its going to be mounted behind my battery box,does the oil return need to be below the oil level or can it drain from a higher point on the sump? Anyone forsee any issues? Your flows are backwards as the 'head cooler' isn't doing anything and if behind the battery, probably even less. Std. head cooling oil is bizarrely directly from the sump and not cooled at all so the head gets whatever temp that is in the sump. To improve this situation, oil should be routed from the former 'Y' (changed to a straight union) to a cooler (ideally located in good airstream ie. at front) with its other side split via a 'Y' or a 'T' into the rear cam cover ports, or in your case a single line to the billet oil rail. No return to sump is required as all returns are engine internally routed. 2 Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 19 minutes ago, Gixer1460 said: Your flows are backwards as the 'head cooler' isn't doing anything and if behind the battery, probably even less. Std. head cooling oil is bizarrely directly from the sump and not cooled at all so the head gets whatever temp that is in the sump. To improve this situation, oil should be routed from the former 'Y' (changed to a straight union) to a cooler (ideally located in good airstream ie. at front) with its other side split via a 'Y' or a 'T' into the rear cam cover ports, or in your case a single line to the billet oil rail. No return to sump is required as all returns are engine internally routed. Thanks,it ain't going at the front of the bike if it gets fitted though. Quote
davecara Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 1 hour ago, Paulm said: Hmm might have to have a rethink then Whereabout are you thinking of putting the head cooler? Behind the battery will still work as the cooler will have sufficient surface area to radiate heat but it wants to be in airflow really 1 Quote
davecara Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 couple of more pics for reference: 3 Quote
Gixer1460 Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 35 minutes ago, davecara said: Behind the battery will still work as the cooler will have sufficient surface area to radiate heat but it wants to be in airflow really Sort of true - airflow here is generally minimal and it's also a low pressure zone which won't help! My main cooler is under the seat but has a thermo switched fan due to lack of airflow. Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 53 minutes ago, davecara said: Whereabout are you thinking of putting the head cooler? Behind the battery will still work as the cooler will have sufficient surface area to radiate heat but it wants to be in airflow really Here ish be a bit higher up obviously 1 Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 The idea is to mount it off the bar the battery box is mounted off. Quote
davecara Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 No reason why that wont work, it might not be massively efficient though unless you've got airflow through it. Adding a fan might not be a bad idea Quote
Baron Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 I got my main oil cooler under the seat and head cooler next to downpipe. Head cooler was a must, because otherwise I couldnt get oil temps below 110C while driving, even when fans were on. Airflow is restricted, so it wont cool down. Need to make some kind of air deflector during winter time to get better perfomance out from it. Head cooler is small "SETRAB STD 110" with 12V SPAL fan on it. Now when Im driving, oil temps are ~80C and I still have possibility to start the fan. 2 Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 2 minutes ago, Baron said: I got my main oil cooler under the seat and head cooler next to downpipe. Head cooler was a must, because otherwise I couldnt get oil temps below 110C while driving, even when fans were on. Airflow is restricted, so it wont cool down. Need to make some kind of air deflector during winter time to get better perfomance out from it. Head cooler is small "SETRAB STD 110" with 12V SPAL fan on it. Now when Im driving, oil temps are ~80C and I still have possibility to start the fan. My main cooler is still at the front of the motor where it would traditionally be,I have a billet oil rail and a cooler and some hoses so I thought,why not fit them 1 Quote
clivegto Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 I used one of them fancy oil returns form the head cooler to the cam cover on the Harris. The feed comes from the crank cases like in Daves pictures Quote
Wagola Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 4 hours ago, Paulm said: Going to fit a head cooler to my turbo GS over the winter,the oil flow will go as in the pic below,so oil to cooler out of cooler to sump as its going to be mounted behind my battery box,does the oil return need to be below the oil level or can it drain from a higher point on the sump? Anyone forsee any issues? So , is the head cooler for a GS or GSXR motor ? Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 7 minutes ago, Wagola said: So , is the head cooler for a GS or GSXR motor ? Oil cooled its a bandit motor,that's why it's in this section Quote
clivegto Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 Your drawing is basically right for the bar feed. Quote
Wagola Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 35 minutes ago, Paulm said: Oil cooled its a bandit motor,that's why it's in this section Ok, my bad. Just confused me somewhat when the original post said it was a turbo GS. Makes sense now to me now. Quote
Paulm Posted September 25, 2023 Author Posted September 25, 2023 39 minutes ago, Wagola said: Ok, my bad. Just confused me somewhat when the original post said it was a turbo GS. Makes sense now to me now. No worries,this one 5 Quote
Dezza Posted September 26, 2023 Posted September 26, 2023 The hose routing is pretty straightforward and the height the cooler is mounted shouldn't be a problem as it's pressurised. The point on the crankcase feeds the cooler with a straight hose. The other outlet on the cooler feeds the two holes in the cam cover so one hose from the cooler fits onto your rail. Otherwise it has to split into two to fit onto each part of the cam cover. From what I have seen of your bike it's going to be a major challenge finding space for the head cooler though. Mine's in the seat unit but that's not an option here. My seat has a big hole in the top so the heat rises up to dissipate. I still made sure I fitted a hugger and a grill on the underside as a stone throught the cooler could easily end in disaster. Position the cooler near the back wheel and a protection grill from stones is going to be a must. Quote
slayer61 Posted September 26, 2023 Posted September 26, 2023 3 hours ago, Wagola said: Under the headlight ? In place of the headlight! Quote
Paulm Posted September 26, 2023 Author Posted September 26, 2023 3 hours ago, Wagola said: Under the headlight ? No room and dont want it there anyway. Quote
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