LT1 Overheating, SOLVED.
You are very wrong in this aspect if you want to be a little bitch about it. The mechanical water pump requires the motor to be running to operate. This is by far less efficient than using the reserve energy of the battery to power an electric water pump. Go ahead, call your tow truck cause you are out of gas.
Your experience does not equate to fact across the platform. Your experience could have been due to any number of underlying factors.
Oh and the more complex, less capable part is fact.
BTW, most things I've read on the internet show that in your application you are NOT the opposite. You are exactly like everyone else in your application, physics has a weird thing about that.

An EWP wouldn't keep up with my cooling needs in my APPLICATION (the ACTION of putting something into operation). It's that simple, no "for the win" here for the EWP.
Maybe if somebody could retrofit a stock LS1 mechanical pump run on accessory drive that didn't rely on ridiculous cam driven driveshaft that's prone to failure and leaking all over the opti I would be all over that....everything LS is better, right?

If you are "destroying" Opti's from a little coolant leak, the Opti was the issue. I think many people tend to forget the Opti's see far more moisture and water than what a little coolant leak can give it. You know, like from rain and standing water? I've replaced my stock (160K miles and 20 year old) spline drive coupler once, can't say the same for any belt drive. **** I've replaced my serpentine belt 3 times in the last 10K miles! My Power steering pump broke off -literally- (replace 2 years before that), my alternator chucked the pulley (also replace 2 years before that), and my AC pulley snapped in half (1 year old). All within the last year! So far the water pump has gone, by far, the longest; especially that spline drive.
And it wasn't actually the spline drive it's self either, it was the coupler.
The commonality of the weep hole "destroying" an Opti, well, isn't. The general reaction to people having Opti issues and trashing their good (but dirty) Opti is very common though. All that needs to happen in the scenario? Clean it and re-install it. It does suck, but I haven't lost an Opti to oil leaks or coolant leaks yet (and yes, I've had both on the Opti and oil in it).
Get with the times? If that were the case more things would be spline driven as they do in Aviation.
Last edited by hrcslam; Jul 16, 2015 at 02:12 PM.
It's less about speed than it is about power output (read: BTU's of heat) and the effective cooling of the cooling system to remove that heat. Which again, is based on ambient conditions (OAT, ground temps, humidity, etc.), vehicle output, radiator size, and air flow: all of which are variable and constantly changing.
The simple answer is you WILL reach a point where the EWP can't keep up before you reach that point with a MWP in the exact same conditions.
Here's another way to put it.
Are there scenarios where the EWP is not sufficient for said application? Yes.
Are there scenarios where the MWP isn't sufficient for said application? No.
Are there scenarios where the EWP is a better option the a MWP? Yes. Vis-a-Versa? Yes.
Do EWP and MWP fail? Yes.
Simple.
It's less about speed than it is about power output (read: BTU's of heat) and the effective cooling of the cooling system to remove that heat. Which again, is based on ambient conditions (OAT, ground temps, humidity, etc.), vehicle output, radiator size, and air flow: all of which are variable and constantly changing.
The simple answer is you WILL reach a point where the EWP can't keep up before you reach that point with a MWP in the exact same conditions.
Here's another way to put it.
Are there scenarios where the EWP is not sufficient for said application? Yes.
Are there scenarios where the MWP isn't sufficient for said application? No.
Are there scenarios where the EWP is a better option the a MWP? Yes. Vis-a-Versa? Yes.
Do EWP and MWP fail? Yes.
Simple.
No one can say when and at what combo an EWP will stop being effective at cooling. Granted I am a slightly biased example as my power adder is in vaccum while cruising, but, my power levels are cooled fine with an EWP at 75mph. Perhaps at 90mph continuous speeds it won't be? IDK and so far no one else in this thread does either. Which is full circle, no one can say an MWP or EWP will be bad/good/neither with conclusive, real life proof. Not science says it won't work, actually datalogs showing IAT/ECT running away. But then we delve into who defines stabilized temps yadda yadda yadda.
For the record, I can't think of any mechanical pump on an accessory drive, usually they like to convert to electricity prior to distribution
(I know pads may have other stuff but whats the big users, generators/starters) More fun facts? The biggest killer of my stuff's system efficiency, the damn fan. Mechanical spun, axial flow, constant volume fan. That and bearings. And your faith in spline drives (the coupler is a spline drive) is interesting. I would not call them an end all solution to stuff, they break just as easy as anything else. Spline inserts have a terribly short life span for teh most part and even a metal to metal spline conenction has a lifespan. Are they couple thousand TBO? No, but they do fail.
/thread off topic
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No one can say when and at what combo an EWP will stop being effective at cooling. Granted I am a slightly biased example as my power adder is in vaccum while cruising, but, my power levels are cooled fine with an EWP at 75mph. Perhaps at 90mph continuous speeds it won't be? IDK and so far no one else in this thread does either. Which is full circle, no one can say an MWP or EWP will be bad/good/neither with conclusive, real life proof. Not science says it won't work, actually datalogs showing IAT/ECT running away. But then we delve into who defines stabilized temps yadda yadda yadda.
For the record, I can't think of any mechanical pump on an accessory drive, usually they like to convert to electricity prior to distribution
(I know pads may have other stuff but whats the big users, generators/starters) More fun facts? The biggest killer of my stuff's system efficiency, the damn fan. Mechanical spun, axial flow, constant volume fan. That and bearings. And your faith in spline drives (the coupler is a spline drive) is interesting. I would not call them an end all solution to stuff, they break just as easy as anything else. Spline inserts have a terribly short life span for teh most part and even a metal to metal spline conenction has a lifespan. Are they couple thousand TBO? No, but they do fail.
/thread off topic
Honestly, cruising at 90mph, the air flow through the radiator is so high I don't think that'll be a real issue either. But that will depend on how many RPM's it'll take for you to maintain 90mph. I went cruising for a bit at over 100mph (about 2250RPMs) at over 95°F out (it was night time, about 2AM so open roads), temps stayed below 185°F. AC on full blast too. How would an EWP do on my car in that situation? Not sure, could be fine, could've ran a little hotter. Likely wouldn't have overheated though.
I never said the spline drive is the end all be all. A lot of aviation has a starter/gen on spline drive and that's it (fuel pumps too, but some -read: small acft- use only electric/boost pumps). But, that's because that's all the engine has (usually due to space and location plus redundancy limitations; fixed wing). I've seen AC compressors, fuel pump's, and hydraulic pump's on spline drive. What I don't see? Is anything that can be practically driven of the engine done by a belt or electric.
The argument comes up because people don't understand how it actually works and argue to it. "But, but, but it works perfect for me!" Is the argument they put up when a logical legitimate discussion regarding the limitations of the reduced cooling provided by the EWP along with it's poorer than MWP reliability and increased system complexity. Want to know the limitations of an EWP? Come here to Phoenix in the Summer, let's put down some 30-50 minute open road course sessions. I'm sure we'll find it real quick.
Last edited by hrcslam; Jul 16, 2015 at 03:42 PM.
Honestly, cruising at 90mph, the air flow through the radiator is so high I don't think that'll be a real issue either. But that will depend on how many RPM's it'll take for you to maintain 90mph. I went cruising for a bit at over 100mph (about 2250RPMs) at over 95°F out (it was night time, about 2AM so open roads), temps stayed below 185°F. AC on full blast too. How would an EWP do on my car in that situation? Not sure, could be fine, could've ran a little hotter. Likely wouldn't have overheated though.
I never said the spline drive is the end all be all. A lot of aviation has a starter/gen on spline drive and that's it (fuel pumps too, but some -read: small acft- use only electric/boost pumps). But, that's because that's all the engine has (usually due to space and location plus redundancy limitations; fixed wing). I've seen AC compressors, fuel pump's, and hydraulic pump's on spline drive. What I don't see? Is anything that can be practically driven of the engine done by a belt or electric.
The argument comes up because people don't understand how it actually works and argue to it. "But, but, but it works perfect for me!" Is the argument they put up when a logical legitimate discussion regarding the limitations of the reduced cooling provided by the EWP along with it's poorer than MWP reliability and increased system complexity. Want to know the limitations of an EWP? Come here to Phoenix in the Summer, let's put down some 30-50 minute open road course sessions. I'm sure we'll find it real quick.
That being said, gears and bearings are just as finicky and complex.
Either way, both sides to this argument are wrong with a blanket statement applied. I would be more worried about IAT running away than ECT if was doing a long 1/2 mile event. I guarantee my engine bay and cooling stack sheds more BTU than anyone else in this thread, regardless of OAT.
That being said, gears and bearings are just as finicky and complex.
Either way, both sides to this argument are wrong with a blanket statement applied. I would be more worried about IAT running away than ECT if was doing a long 1/2 mile event. I guarantee my engine bay and cooling stack sheds more BTU than anyone else in this thread, regardless of OAT.
So what is it now? And how did you **** up something so simple as the driveshaft assembly?
The complexity I speak about is how any of the given water pumps have their impeller turned. How you continue to argue this is very entertaining!
So what is it now? And how did you **** up something so simple as the driveshaft assembly?
The complexity I speak about is how any of the given water pumps have their impeller turned. How you continue to argue this is very entertaining!
In fact a couple people have responded to this thread (see quotes directly below, you responded to one of them directly - to discount the experience of course) with their personal experience conforming this. Others have experienced no rise in coolant temps (also responses in this thread). And there have been new threads here on LS1Tech asking about raised coolant temps while highway cruising (EWP related of course, because MWP don't do that).
Most LT1s use the head mounted temp sender for the dash and the dash is pretty damned low resolution.
My experience is that a b-body with a 30gpm electric pump and 4.10s A4 tranny runs hotter at 70mph than at 35mph when viewed through data logging software even in 40f weather. The 35mph even came at the end of the 2 hour drive at 70mph so heat soak was thorough. The Meziere had spun off the impeller hence the 30gpm backup pump being on.
As hrcslam is trying to say this is about comprehension, people should understand things and too few put forth the effort.
You want an extra .1 drag racing and want to be able to cool in the pits an electric can do that BUT understand it comes at a cost of ultimate capacity and increased complexity of the system. They are sufficient in cooling capacity for most cars, but that is NOT the argument many pose as those who ignore physics often pretend they are an upgrade in capacity.
Far as the puller/pusher seeing as the system is pretty much a closed loop I suspect this has little application to this particular discussion, much like the temps of vehicles with different thermostat ratings in different engines.
I've seen it get pretty hot though before when I had a mechanical pump too in the summer, LT1s are just more temperature sensitive IMO.
Shall we continue this dance? Do you want to continue to be a belligerent uninformed poster who seems hell bent on showing everyone here exactly how much he doesn't know?
Last edited by hrcslam; Jul 17, 2015 at 01:38 PM.
Is it more complex? Yes
. But it's better than what's currently offered. (Everything I do is brushless, even some VSCF stuff)
(Everything I do is brushless, even some VSCF stuff)
That and cost, diodes and PMG are pricey compared to a simple brush/commutator design. Granted you could use 12v battery as excitation, but again would need to be regulated etc, we use ACFT 28vDC for that on simple GCU vs adding in a PMG.
But, in theory, you could tie your control unit feedback loop based off of TPS/ECT/VSS in order to wind down EWP at idle and go full field at WOT. Would be pretty awesome actually lol
Last edited by Shownomercy; Jul 17, 2015 at 01:52 PM.
That and cost, diodes and PMG are pricey compared to a simple brush/commutator design. Granted you could use 12v battery as excitation, but again would need to be regulated etc, we use ACFT 28vDC for that on simple GCU vs adding in a PMG.










