Isn't that how the factory oil cooler mounts?
One other thing is the autos came with the cooler mounted in the wheel arch (where the abs pump would otherwise be with a fan on.
If the oil does get air in it surface tension will caus it to foam. That is why the oil suction tube is always in the bottom of the sump. What it will do is have a glop of air in it until it is purged out by the pressure. As it will all be the same pressure it will flow through and out (bled system) its how we don't have aircraft hydraulics full of air, and trust me they are some convolouted routings.
Rich
Quoting iceman69510:
Quoting turbowop:
This thread is really messing with my thinking on how oil coolers should be mounted. I don't understand how it would be correct to have the inlet and outlet both on the bottom. Any oil flowing through the cooler would only flow through the bottom passages. With the inlet on the bottom and outlet on top, the oil would be forced through the entire core, or if both the inlet and outlet were on top, same deal. This doesn't make any sense to me.
I think it may depend somewhat on the internal design of the cooler, but you have to remember Mark that pressure is equal everywhere. 70 psi of oil coming in to the cooler is going to be 70 psi everywhere in the cooler, not just dribbling in at the bottom. Think of air pressure in a balloon.
I am struggling with the talk about the air in the system and how that may effect oil flow, and if it gets out in normal running, does it come back again next time?