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Thread: Hole in intercooler

  1. #1
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    Hole in intercooler

    Heys guys,

    Pretty sure I have a small hole in my intercooler. Just wondering if this will affect performance much? The cooler is an uprated Allisport one and pump has been tinkered with slightly. Theres no abnormal egt temps either


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  2. #2
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    Where is the hole ? In between the fins it wont have any affect, in a tube then you will be losing pressure.
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  3. #3
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    Depends on the size of the hole. You should do a boost leak test to determine the severity.
    Get it repaired / changed out when you can.

  4. #4
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    Hole is in the tube

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  5. #5
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    When the intake system is under vacuum, you will be sucking in un-metered air into the engine. This can cause a 'lean' burn if serious enough.
    Under boost, you will be losing pressure from the system, losing power, and depending on how the ECU/ECM manages fuelling, potential rich mixture.

    Usually your throttle sensor, air flow meter, oxygen sensors, engine temp and a few other sensors regulate the combustion process. With a large leak, there is too many variables for the system to adequately compensate. If it's a small corrosion hole, or a hairline crack, you will probably be fine... but if its a .22 sized bullet hole, forget it.

    That's how it works in a petrol system at least. All this black magic diesel shenanigans has me beat sometimes, so don't take it as gospel.

  6. #6
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    Yeah its only small. There is a little bit of oil coming out of it. Like its been nipped with a screw driver or something. I thought it felt down a bit on power.

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  7. #7
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    So what boost pressure does a stock defender make?

    Im no expert (again), but wouldn't oil in the intercooler and charge piping suggest either:
    -leaking turbo seal / CHRA
    -excessive blow by, increased positive crankcase pressure
    -excessive EGR activity.

    Not sure where the crank case ventilation runs to, nor where the EGR feeds back into the intake, but it would mostly be after the intercooler though?

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Toxic_Avenger View Post
    When the intake system is under vacuum, you will be sucking in un-metered air into the engine. This can cause a 'lean' burn if serious enough.
    Under boost, you will be losing pressure from the system, losing power, and depending on how the ECU/ECM manages fuelling, potential rich mixture.
    This isn't a petrol. Diesels always run lean. The only difference is how lean.

    Quote Originally Posted by Toxic_Avenger View Post
    Usually your throttle sensor, air flow meter, oxygen sensors, engine temp and a few other sensors regulate the combustion process. With a large leak, there is too many variables for the system to adequately compensate. If it's a small corrosion hole, or a hairline crack, you will probably be fine... but if its a .22 sized bullet hole, forget it.

    That's how it works in a petrol system at least. All this black magic diesel shenanigans has me beat sometimes, so don't take it as gospel.
    300tdi is fully mechanical. It'll be losing boost which will cost fuel economy and power. The fuel pump will reduce fuel based on the pressure lost so no real danger.

    A temporary solution is to clean and epoxy or even crimp the fin to stop the leak.

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