The transmission cooler in the radiator in my setup is unused. Has anyone used that as a power steering cooler instead of adding an additional cooler in front of the condenser?
Do you want to heat the power steering fluid to the same temperature as the engine coolant?
Sure, if that temp is an optimum temp for the steering to perform at. I've seen some articles say that you should keep it below 220 and some say keep it below 180. If 220 is the right answer then keeping it at coolant temp sounds great, if 180 is the answer it'd be right on the edge. My coolant temp varies from 193 to 206 at the cylinder head, the temp will be lower at the bottom of the radiator where the trans cooler is. If the fluid and steering perform and survive at 190ish then I see no problem heating the fluid to that temp, as long as the cooler can keep it at that temp.
it does not offer sufficient cooling, in part because the minimum temperature from the transmission temperature is the engine coolant temperature.
My answer considered stock systems, the PSC is a different animal. For what its worth a well known ford trans engineer has stated as fact a trans cooler will remove heat from a hot trans, but will not add to warm up trans fluids. He provided the test docs to back this up, dont ask how as physics are not my bag. Assuming this is correct this would apply to steering fluid as well. Again, an engine at 195++ is not what you wanna see for steering fluid.
My answer considered stock systems, the PSC is a different animal. For what its worth a well known ford trans engineer has stated as fact a trans cooler will remove heat from a hot trans, but will not add to warm up trans fluids. He provided the test docs to back this up, dont ask how as physics are not my bag. Assuming this is correct this would apply to steering fluid as well. Again, an engine at 195++ is not what you wanna see for steering fluid.
Makes sense to me, while they are in the same radiator the surface area of the cooling fins to air is much greater than they are to liquid and they are in separate cores. So the heat transfer from the fluid would have to be greater than the cooling properties of the air across the fins in order to transfer heat from one to the other. Now it could for sure warm up the air flowing through the radiator which would reduce the cooling of whichever core is in the rear.
The little transmission cooler buried inside my Mopar radiator is bathed in engine coolant.
I hope he never has a chat with my heater core.He provided the test docs to back this up, dont ask how as physics are not my bag.
I hope he never has a chat with my heater core.
The coolant in the lower tank shouldn't be equal to engine coolant temp, should it, else the radiator is not doing its job...?
if the coolant temp in the lower tank is sufficiently below the temp at which the ps fluid would run without a cooler, then it seems that the unused auto trans cooler would offer some cooling to the ps fluid
if the coolant temp in the lower tank is sufficiently below the temp at which the ps fluid would run without a cooler, then it seems that the unused auto trans cooler would offer some cooling to the ps fluid
Confused engineers are where things like this come from.
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