Hi Guys, I recall previous threads about this modification and was reminded about it by fellow CAV owner Ken Jackson. The problem was that coolant temperatures would spike suddenly after a good blast up through the gears. You could putt along all day, dust off the odd tuner car or other supposed to fast cars and the gauge would stay 80>90c. However stand on it from second through fifth and over she'd go 110>120 and it took a long time to come back.
The rising temps were tamed by plumbing the back of the intake manifold at the blocked off water passages to the front of the manifold. As a result localized boiling doesn't produce trapped gasses, engine block coolant pressures are lowered, the front half of the heads should run cooler as some of the hot water at the back has been bled off and filling the cooling system has to be easier.
Maybe a bit of voodoo but I can say that it certainly worked on Angelos 392W. We decided to go with stainless steel tubing so we never have to go back in after it (all buried under the webers and heat sheild).
Something to look at when your building an engine, it's another of those fiddely jobs that's easier done before the car is together /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif
The rising temps were tamed by plumbing the back of the intake manifold at the blocked off water passages to the front of the manifold. As a result localized boiling doesn't produce trapped gasses, engine block coolant pressures are lowered, the front half of the heads should run cooler as some of the hot water at the back has been bled off and filling the cooling system has to be easier.
Maybe a bit of voodoo but I can say that it certainly worked on Angelos 392W. We decided to go with stainless steel tubing so we never have to go back in after it (all buried under the webers and heat sheild).
Something to look at when your building an engine, it's another of those fiddely jobs that's easier done before the car is together /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif