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Author: Subject: BEC Oil temps
Patten

posted on 7/11/16 at 12:06 PM Reply With Quote
BEC Oil temps

Good morning,

As the Sun was out, I thought it would be rude not to take out the Fury on the chilly weekend we just had

Just a few questions really, After a warm up and about 30mins of steady driving the oil temps never exceeded 48/50c. Is this normal? I am completely new to BEC and their characteristics

Bit hesitant to give it the beans at 50c.. Or am I being too over careful?

Oil is Castrol Power 1 using the standard R1 5PW oil/water cooler
VW Polo rad

Regards
Chris

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adithorp

posted on 7/11/16 at 01:40 PM Reply With Quote
With the oil-water cooler it should act to heat the oil as the water temp comes up. I'd expect it to be close to water temp after 30mins. What was the water temp reading?





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Patten

posted on 7/11/16 at 01:57 PM Reply With Quote
Water temps were 55/60ish
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adithorp

posted on 7/11/16 at 02:24 PM Reply With Quote
Half an hour of running should get water temps up. Think the stat opend at 70-75ish and mine (5vy) gets there in 10-15 min, even just ticking over. I'd check the stat isn't stuck open, resulting in it over cooling with the large (compared to bike) rad' and low ambient temp.





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Patten

posted on 7/11/16 at 02:50 PM Reply With Quote
Good shout, will take a look tonight

Would would be the "Best" operating tempriture for the oil to be at before giving it some abuse?

Chris

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adithorp

posted on 7/11/16 at 04:21 PM Reply With Quote
I find it's a bit of a chicken and egg situation. Don't thrash until the oil temp comes up but the temp doesn't really come up untill you thrash it. I'm running a seperate oil cooler which does make that worse. With the standard one I'd say on the road, once the water temp is up you're good to go. For track use I was advised (by a BSB engine builder/mech) warm it up gently untill the fan kicks in (standard is 105deg) then switch off and let it heat soak 10mins, then repeat and go.





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OliilO

posted on 7/11/16 at 09:58 PM Reply With Quote
Is the sender mounted remotely? If so, it will read cool.

My oil temp sender is mounted with the pressure sender on the end of a ~30cm braided hose to isolate it from engine vibrations. It always reads really low because it's effectively a dead end for the oil and only heats up through heat soak. I need to relocate it to the sump really.

[Edited on 7/11/16 by OliilO]

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limpetminer

posted on 8/11/16 at 12:00 PM Reply With Quote
To get oil temp up you need more water temp, when i was racing i put some duct tape across water rad when ambient temp was low.
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CosKev3

posted on 8/11/16 at 01:03 PM Reply With Quote
An oil temp sender should never be positioned in a dead end position!

As above if it is it will never read correctly,needs to be in the sump or with oil flowing over it.

Mines in the end of the oil modine fixing bolt and reads accurately

[Edited on 8/11/16 by CosKev3]

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Patten

posted on 8/11/16 at 05:14 PM Reply With Quote
Cheers for the replies

My temp sensor is mounted on the sump

Will check the stat tonight and see if it's stuck open. We got the engine bloody hot during the IVA dramas so it may be stuck open

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OliilO

posted on 8/11/16 at 05:53 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by CosKev3
An oil temp sender should never be positioned in a dead end position!

As above if it is it will never read correctly,needs to be in the sump or with oil flowing over it.
[Edited on 8/11/16 by CosKev3]


I'm aware of that hence saying it needs moving from where the original builder located it.

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