Tuesday 10 April 2018

Cooling system Part 1


When I started with the cooling system, I had no idea how important it really was. But the temperature of the engine must be controlled all the time. If it isn’t then the combustion chamber walls, piston crown, upper part of the cylinder, valves can expand and change shape. Detonation (mixture of fuel and air starts to burn in more places at once) or preignition (the mixture self-ignites before the spark plug can create a spark) can occur. However, over cooled engine can cause many problems as well. It can reduce vaporising of the fuel in compression stroke and creates deposits on cylinder walls which will dilute the oil and destroy its lubricating properties. Or water vapour formed during combustion will form sludge with the oil and then corrode the engine parts.

Nowadays is used water-cooling instead of the air-cooling because it is much easier to control the temperature. But the engine operating temperature is around 90°C which is quite close to the boiling temperature. To prevent water from boiling, ethylene glycol is added which increases the boiling temperature and lowers the freezing temperature as well. But that is not all, when the car is running the coolant is kept under pressure and for every 4kN/m2 the boiling temperature is raised by 1°C. Another thing that is necessary to put into the coolant, before it is used in car, are rust, corrosion and foaming inhibitors. Because as we all know metal and water on its own is not an ideal combination.
The coolant is circulating around engine all the time, either in small or large circle (that is what I call it and will explain later). If it wasn’t, localised overheating would become a serious problem.


Recently I discovered that the warning on the cap of the reservoir is not only about our safety. You should never open the cap when the engine is still hot. That is not only because the coolant can come out and cause serious damage to you or somebody around you but also because the moment the cap is opened the system lose its pressurised state. It will try to equalise to the atmospheric pressure everywhere around and it can start to boil immediately which will destroy the hoses in the system.

The cooling system itself has more than only one job:
- it needs to heat up the engine and bring it to the operating temperature as soon as possible
- it needs to maintain the temperature at all costs
- and then it has to remove surplus heat from the engine



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