
Originally Posted by
Sketchy_Racer
Thought I would put pics up of the water cooled head I made for my H100 bucket motor.
The reason for the water cooling is to maintain my motors power as at the moment I start the race with good power but slowly lose it as the engine heats up beyond the optimum running temperature. I don't have easy access to ally welding so I decided to try make one out of fabricated alluminum. It worked reasonably well, and it seems to work effectively.
I started by grinding off all the fins off the head, then machining a shoulder for an outer ring to bolt up against and seal.
This posed the problem of exposing a couple of casting imperfections and the resulting holes. Never to fear the JB weld will fill them up.
I then made the outer ring which is what gives me my water capacity, I tried to keep this as a minimum inside the head as to much water capacity in the head will slow down my flow with the thermosyphon. Finally a top cap with water inlets and and outlets and we're ready to bolt together.
Mount the radiator at a level above the head. I was hoping to place the radiator on the frame somewhere but this proved to difficult due to the fact that it has to be above the head for thermosyphon to work. So it got mounted where the front number board would usually go and piping running through the chassis back to the head. It took a little bit of thought to prevent the pipes from binding when the steering turns but it worked out well in the end.
I love thermosyphon, not having a water pump is great as it removes another component that can fail. It's a very simple system, where the water in the head is heated, in which process the water density changes and become less and naturally the cooler water in the radiator wants to fall (much like hot air rises) and occupy the space of the of the less dense water which then creates a self regulating flow in the cooling system. It will take a little bit of time to set the system up to maintain the correct operating temperature of roughly 55 degrees.
It took me three evening in the shed to make this and I am looking forward to testing and setting it up on the track!
Anyway, here's the pics!
Cheers,
-Sketchy
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