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Thread: old/new trans cooler - in series or discard the old one?

  1. #1
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    Question old/new trans cooler - in series or discard the old one?

    What do you reckon guys? In a disco II TD5, I'm installing a RR cooler. Should I leave the old one in and run them in series or discard it?

    Dave
    1974 Military Lightweight Landy --- Some dementia at 50 years old
    2000 Disco series 2 now sadly moved on!
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  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by davros View Post
    What do you reckon guys? In a disco II TD5, I'm installing a RR cooler. Should I leave the old one in and run them in series or discard it?

    Dave
    Dave

    Any heat you can get out of the tanks on the radiator is a good thing for the engine temp, so I prefer manual engine engine radiators and remote transmission coolers on auto cars. Where to remote the cooler is the problem.

    In my experience, there are 2 types of standard RRc oil transmission oil coolers, both made out of tubing with little loops of heat exchange wire spiralling along the length of the tube.
    • The early type used on the LT230/TF727 which was a lazy "U" which crossed over the radiator aperture near the top then did a 180 degree turn and went back along the bottom of the aperture with the fittings on the LHS.
    • The later type was a single tube that only runs once across over the aperture.


    I originally had a standard early type lazy U type on my Torqueflyte 727 and I didn't notice high transmission temps even on hot days. (Although I was experiencing high engine temps with the 5 litre alloy V8.)

    When the 727 was replaced with the ZF transmission they also replaced the transmission cooler to the later type "because it was more efficient" even though they look to be the same construction to me. What I now notice is that on hot days, particularly on hills like the Mount Ousley
    road to Sydney the transmission temps gets up to the mid ranges and on a recent trip back from Dubbo with a 4 ton load in tow I had very significant temperature concerns.

    I am planning to fit an additional transmission cooler.

    Diana

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  3. #3
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    the OEM cooler is a known weakness - I recently had mine start to leak and replaced it $800 part plus all the labour to get at it. you might want to consider that in your thinking.

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