Pat,
I really don't think you would get anywhere near enough air flow doing that. A fan will not move more that a small percentage of the air that you would get by driving along with a direct flow of air over the radiators core.
Electric fans aren't great in terms of air flow anyway.
I have hours of datalogging from setting up chargecoolers somewhere... with static 'in traffic' running, through to 150+mph running 20psi boost, and also rolling road sessions with an absoloutely vast fan trying to cool the car down.
You need a huge airflow to cool down the inlet charge, especially if you are working the car hard.
I ended up setting my race car up with a chargecooler and radiator for it specifically, and after about a week of mucking about binned the radiator and fitted one that was over twice the size and the full width of the front opening. (about a metre) This was not obstructed by anything and had a pair of Kenlow fans on the main custom rad behind it pulling air through.
That was good enough, but you could still see the inlet charge temp rising on the data logging traces throughout a race.
On another note about running rads out of the line of direct airflow, I used to co drive in competitive safaris / hill rallies in a 4.8litre 100" Defender which ran about 360bhp and a rear mount rad with a vast scoop above the cab, and that was a real pain at times so direct airflow is very important.
I will see if I can find the data logging info I have regarding charge cooling.
I also have flow figures and so on from getting everything flow tested and it was very interesting and succesful, but... and this is a big but.... It cost a fortune....
Nothing was standard and we were looking at huge improvements... 210bhp to 391bhp and 365lb/ft of torque. You wont get this from a TDI. It is in my opinion a bit of a waste of time. Without mapable electronic control of the fueling you are going to struggle. (Those figures werent just improved by chargecooling.... we had gas flowing, Motec management, custoem pistons, cams, huge custom roller bearing turbo, 3" exhaust and tubular manifold etc etc.
Even after all this work... we still had a car that was really compromised... I cant remeber the exact figures from the last power run but it was something like.
2000rpm 60bhp!
3000rpm 90bhp!
4000rpm 300bhp
5000rpm 370bhp
6000rpm 391bhp
It jumped by over 200bhp in the space of 1000 rpm. It would bite you very hard if you werent careful.
There are other issues too.... Does it have a water heated inlet manifold... if so you could to disable it, which then makes it a bugger to run cold and so on.. (dont know if a TDI has this)
Good luck if you do try it though!
I think a decent modern turbo (things have moved on alot) and manifold would be the best place to start.
anyway I have waffeled a bit so I will shut up!!
Edited to add this picture... What looks like the huge radiator on the front... was just for the chargecooler...!
Cheers
Pete



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. From my experiance driving some wierd machinery I reckon you are better off with a variable vane turbo of some type, have the fuel pump profesionally tweaked to suit, and most importantly have someone build you a really nice tricked auto to run behind it. Failing this get a genuine AC Cobra they didnt have turbo's or turbo lag
just a shocking record for killing its owners.
, and with their budgets I am pretty sure that they would have thought it through!
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