Did do some research on this and the fact I have a 40 litre water tank in the back of the D2 thought I thought it could possibly be used as a reservoir, but fresh water is precious if I was to do the Simpson or such, for VHC trips would not be an issue.
Looking at my Nanocom logs and it would appear that the ATAIC (mine is a SercK) works pretty bloody well with inlet temps at around 35-40C, but again this is driving every day with very high 'ambient' temps to the radiator. The front area of the D2 is 'small' and compromised as many previous threads have attested to and have not put driving lights in front of the radiator due to this fact
The thought is to reduce the thermal load into the radiator to allow for an EF to operate effectively, irrespective of the temps of the day or the load on the engine. There is enough capacity for the radiator to cool the TD5 irrespective of state of tune as can be attested to around the world, but headroom is restricted as anyone towing will attest to as well.
As with coolant many manufacturers are moving to electric (power losses) and in the case of intercooling, companies such as BMW, Toyota ( Toyota V35A-FTS 3.5L Twin Turbo Engine Specs, Problems, Reliability, oil - In-Depth Review ) etc. have gone WTAIC for the higher performance variants whilst lower powered may utilize ATAIC, emissions are one reason but the effectiveness of being able to control temps are primary.
One of the thoughts I had was along the lines of the plumbing, already the TD5 takes the outlet of the turbo down low and then lifts it up to the intercooler, if this was to rather go down into a pipe that runs low with the coolant assembly below the radiator and a product such as the barrel from PWR then almost vertical directly into the intake manifold - remember I am thinking about EF so space is not an issue in this case and it may not be a issue with the VF - this is entirely possible. Then its a case of finding space for the small 'radiator assembly'...


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