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My 74 k5 also the staggered fan with the fan clutch. Not sure if it is 5 or 7 blades tho, I'm 700 miles from it right now.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
to say you "cant" over cool an engine is kind of a misstatement. keeping the engine temp too low and the fuel wont conver into heat like it normally would. heat is energy released during a combustion, so the cooler the engine runs the more heat that gets removed via water and cooled down in the radiator now and that heat is replaced by more heat from the next combustion. so if you have to remove heat it will get replaced by more heat and youre equivalently waisting energy.if we're talking intake temp thats a little different cause the cooler the more dense meaning more fuel you can add. the reason we have to keep the temps down is cause of metal problems and the most efficient temps would surpass the failure temp of most metals
Quote from: Irish_Alley on May 17, 2015, 09:06:40 pmto say you "cant" over cool an engine is kind of a misstatement. keeping the engine temp too low and the fuel wont conver into heat like it normally would. heat is energy released during a combustion, so the cooler the engine runs the more heat that gets removed via water and cooled down in the radiator now and that heat is replaced by more heat from the next combustion. so if you have to remove heat it will get replaced by more heat and youre equivalently waisting energy.if we're talking intake temp thats a little different cause the cooler the more dense meaning more fuel you can add. the reason we have to keep the temps down is cause of metal problems and the most efficient temps would surpass the failure temp of most metals Agreed. Such is why we seek to warm up our engine's before we drive. My statement was meant relatively....as in yes, if one were to, say, maintain their engine bay full with glacier ice for the sake of cooling, then it is arguable that they are overcooling their engine. Yes, engine heat is important to operational efficiency and yes, engine heat is different from intake heat. In this case, however, we're talking about a mechanical fan on an sbc 350, no? How a mechanical fan can overcool that size motor is a mystery to me. Maybe it's that I live in a warm climate....and so my reference point is different than someone in Alaska, for example. Nevertheless if there's an OE or stock mechanical fan out there that "overcools".....then I want one.That said, I'm w Griffin now....and am going to just sit back and watch (and hopefully learn) this thread.