- Here is a nice blog for those who think small japanese fourbangers are smart pieces of engineering and cool to play with. Yes, its about Toyotas and souping up 4A-GEs. The basics of naturally aspirating engine tuning is the same and all the good advice written here apply to our B6- and BP- motors.
http://www.hachiroku.com.au/blog/?tag=ae86-tuning-guide
- And this is how all track races should look like! Tight matches, close (almost) contact and high pitching engine growl! Yes please:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3dTkMDQmC0
Friday, February 12, 2010
Hot and cold
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- I was leafing my old notes from previous driving seasons and to my surprise there was one or two bullets about high engine temperatures already in 2007 and 2008. Back then the only instrument to monitor coolant temp was the car's original temp gauge. Most of time needle stands straight up and too high temp can be observed as a slight tilt towards northeast.
- As I found myself spending more and more time on track I thought it would be a good idea to install a set of real instruments on top of dash. So I went to get two A'PEXi EL-series gauges: water temp and oil pressure.
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- Now I know that on track, if the day is warm – say +20-25 deg C, coolant temp rises to 100-110 deg C after five to eight hard laps. Even on very cool autumn afternoon, outside air temp showing little less than +10 deg C, the engine heats immediately to 95 deg C. And that's not all, oil temp rose to 110 deg C plus plus. How much above 110? I can't tell any better because the scale ended there.