all i've ever seen happen on F7R's with that done is that they leak worse at the seals.
Well they were all APD and awt engines as it was only them who used the spring upgrade to my memory
You can retain the original spring and you don't need to shim it either to up the pressure. Just need to be a bit clever about what your doing.
I was actually running 3.5-3.8 bar hot under revs , which I agree in my eye's is not enough , my golf rally engine putting out 250hp is running 85 psi hot , just over 6 bar , most cars I have had run at about this pressure , my GTR road car runs 6 bar hot .
I can't see why the oil pump springs can't be shimmed to up the pressure , this was all they used to do back in the day when we were running Mk 2 Escorts , I believe the Peugeot rally engines just run a harder spring on the relief valve , so shimming it would in effect do the same thing , my engine will be running a higher oil pressure when it goes back in
Honestly mate it's quite obvious if you look at the oil pump.Care to elaborate?
So does that mean i'm wrong then? Unfortunately sometimes even prolific engine builders miss even the most obvious and simplest way of doing things.After speaking to SWR this afternoon , who tell me they used to rebuild a lot of these engines in the Clio cup series say they did used to shim the springs up in the pumps to up the pressure , I'm sure if there was another way he would have told me
Honestly mate it's quite obvious if you look at the oil pump.
So does that mean i'm wrong then? Unfortunately sometimes even prolific engine builders miss even the most obvious and simplest way of doing things.
Any diagrams / exploded views as the only pump I have is in the engine. ;-)
SBD use a nylon valve not nylon shims mate. The original one on the xe used to stick.Nylon shims are recommended with the xe from the likes do SBD etc. think the f7 shims were only a couple of mm say 2 std washers thickness.
Aren't the standard valves in a vauxhall engine nylon ?? They have issues with them sticking and losing oil pressure , happened to me before which took a bottom end out.
so what are the mods you say can be done to a standard pump , I can't see after looking inside the pump
Interesting.
Hot idle isn't the issue its hot op at higher revs so this should work.
That would indicate something fundamentally wrong rather than needing to up the oil pressure.
Correct, a poorly designed oil pump.
The low hot oil pressure has always been a problem, the people I have spoken to data logged everything, new crate engines, high and low milage engines all had the same problem.
No need to up the spring pressure on the PRV as it will be closed at that pressure unless there is a problem.
have you data logged your engine's oil pressure ?
Steve
What about running a thicker oil , I always run Castrol Edge 10/60 in my rally cars and I have never noticed the oil pressure low when its hot on tick over
Given that at 3 bar or whatever you are seeing that you consider low the spring will still be holding the release valve shut anyway, what do you hope to gain with a stronger spring?
The problem is a lack of flow through the pump means that on hot (hence thinner and leaking out of all the bearings etc more) oil it cant generate enough pressure even when the relief valve is shut, so changing the spring isnt going to effect that, if its shut, its shut!
Are you saying the pump can't physically make more than 50 psi of pressure?
I have seen tests done but not on this specific engine.have you tested this
Not once the bypass is shut it doesnt, when you are no longer bleeding off oil anyway how can a harder spring help?it works on all other cars
I like the idea of running an oil cooler , but would you lose more oil pressure again as its got to got through the rad ?
Im saying that if it cant flow enough oil relative to the amount that the engine is losing then it cant make more pressure.
I have seen tests done but not on this specific engine.
Like I said, there is a point where the valve is shut, once that happens more spring pressure makes no difference.
So you might find a higher spring raises it slightly, but up the spring and nothing more happens, there is a VERY finite amount of increase available, once the valve is properly shut, thats it, no more increase from spring pressure is possible. And if you are as low as the 3 bar the OP is talking about, I would wager that valve is shut fully on the standard F4R spring anyway.
Not once the bypass is shut it doesnt, when you are no longer bleeding off oil anyway how can a harder spring help?
You lose pressure a little from pushing through the cooler but its generally not a lot, and if it drops oil temps you will gain pressure from it resulting in less hemorrhage, its a case of trial and error to get it right.
I dont know of anyone with issues with cold oil pressure on an F4R (it goes over 100psi IME if revved when cold) so getting the oil to be cooler is a good plan.
That is the exact problem with upping the spring pressure, the cold oil pressure will be off the dial.
As you said it is the poor tolerances with the oil pump which appears to be the problem, something I am trying to address with Porkie's engine.
Steve
Well no if the pump can only make 50 psi then no shimming of the valve would change that , but i'm sure all car oil pumps are designed to run a lot more pressure than they actually do and just bleed the rest off via the valve
so I think shimming the spring will make a difference on all engines , but it will be trial and error getting the right amount on this one as no one offers one ready to go , I know too much oil is no good as is not enough.
If Fred has not already done it , i'll be shimming the pump spring , and might have to do it a few times to get it where I want it , and I will be fitting a baffle into the sump to help , I personally don't thing I'm getting surge issues the use my car see's as is will not generate the cornering forces a track day car see's.
Having said that , i'm also hoping to go dry sumped on the Sodemo engine which will do away with these issue , just got to worry about the dry sump pump belt coming off then lol
That is EXACTLY what they are designed to do, and they are designed to do so with oil that does not get excessively hot.
Let us know how you get on when you shim the pump, personally if you are getting oil pressure as low as the OP mentions (3 bar) then I think that the spring is already strong enough to hold the valve shut against that and hence a firmer spring wont effect hot pressures, but I would expect it to up the cold pressure.
To get decent data what we really need is a datalog with and without a shim on the spring for the same engine, dont suppose you fancy doing both? (bit of a ball ache taking the sump off and swapping it in and out I realise)
Something worth mentioning which many people overlook, is oil cooler hose size. IF you run cooler hoses of too small a bore, they cause a localised increase of pressure, which causes the PRV to open earlier than it should. The PRV sees a higher pressure than the rest of the engine is actually getting. 5/8th ID hose is the minimum you should run IMO