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ATF Temperatures and Cooling System Performance, Part 2

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8.4K views 20 replies 12 participants last post by  Dave940  
#1 · (Edited)
This is a the 2011 follow on report for temperature measurements of the ATF and engine cooling systems last year , http://www.thenewx.org/forum/showthread.php?t=30287.

I can measure up to eight channels with two data loggers. I have thermocouples at:
1. Trans cooler line out
2. Rad cooler in
3. Rad cooler out (Air cooler in)
4. Air cooler out
5. Trans cooler line in
6. Trans pan
7. Engine coolant out of radiator at thermostat
8. Air temperature in front of Air-ATF cooler fan
9. Engine coolant into radiator, this measurement agreed with the ScanGauge value

I added a thermostatically controlled fan to the Air-ATF cooler, http://www.thenewx.org/forum/showthread.php?t=36953 . My X is an 09 with about 17K miles and a stock cooling system except for the fan. The ATF cooler in the radiator is still functional. I did a complete FSM manual flush of the transmission and a flush and refill of the coolant system last fall.

Being able to measure time synchronized temperatures at the various points and then review the data gives a reasonably clear picture of the thermal behavior. There is much interpretation of the data because there are other factors that aren’t being recorded directly; such as throttle position, road grade, vehicle and engine speed, and transmission gear.

Some observations based on the latest data. I’ll explain in more detail when described the data plots.

The cooling system works very well with a large margin for added load during low speed and high ambient temperatures. The few times it has gone over 200F for brief periods it has always cooled back to the 195F range.

The fan on the Air-ATF cooler has added real cooling capacity. While I’d prefer to keep the ATF temperature below 175F, that isn’t necessary. The cost to do so would be prohibitive. The fan does minimize the time above 175F.

There is no doubt to me that the Rad-ATF cooler is performing a needed function. Bypassing the cooler and just running the Air-ATF cooler alone is limiting the cooling capacity. This doesn’t mean there will be an imminent failure but the ATF and transmission will be definitely running at higher temperatures than designed. If I was going to modify the transmission cooling system by bypassing the radiator cooler I would add a fan to the factory air cooler and add an additional air cooler.

The heat from the ATF can significantly increase the temperature of the coolant leaving the radiator. It doesn’t seem to cause a problem for the cooling system to control the engine temperature. Increasing the cooling of the ATF with the addition of a fan on the Air-ATF cooler helps reduce the cooling load on the engine coolant system.

Stop and go driving is severe use in high temperatures. When coming to a stop the temperature out of the trans starts to rise and continues until the vehicle is moving again if the start is gentle. A hard start adds to the thermal load. While stopped, the is no airflow through the Air-ATF cooler and minimal cooling. The rad provides the majority of cooling during this time.

Driving between 40 and 65mph in 5th is light duty use. The converter is locked and there is minimal heat produced. During these conditions, regardless of ambient temperature the Air-Rad cooler alone would probably be adequate.

These plots are driving North on US89 to Page and beyond from the intersection of US160 and US89 near Tuba City. There was road construction with a stop and then following a safety car at about 25mph. There is a steep climb to Antelope Pass. The climb was at 55-60mph in 3rd gear.. Even with the steep climb the coolant only got to about 205F briefly. After the pass the road is mostly downhill from 6100 feet to Page at about 4000 feet, at about 14:50 on the plot. From Page the highway crosses Glen Canyon Bridge at 25mph and then climbs up to the mesa on the west side of the river.

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These plots are the trail up Smoky Hollow Canyon to Smoky Mountain Road. It was done in 4HI and D at 15-20mph with the AC on. To check the effectiveness of the added fan, I pulled the fuse when the fan was running and continued driving uphill. The fan was left off for about 20 minutes and then reconnected. The ATF temperatures gradually increased until the fan was running. The temperatures stabilized until the last steep climb out of the canyon leading to the mesa. Coolant temperatures increased slightly during the climb, but stayed in a comfortable range. Once on the mesa, the road leveled out and the temperatures rapidly dropped. There were some gradual up- and down-hill grades on the mesa.

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This plot is city driving after the engine and trans were completely warmed up in 99-101F weather. AC was off and in D. The grade was uphill with regular stop at traffic lights. The fan dropped the ATF temperatures in both the pan and out of the trans to the coolers.

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These plots started with a cold start and gentle city driving as the engine and trans warmed up. At the point on the plot marked Central was where the uphill grade started. The road becomes the frontage road and there was minimal stops until reaching the high point at Sedillo Hill. AC was off, trans in D, and driving mainly in 5th at 50-55mph. Even though the ambient temperature dropped with increasing altitude, it was still around 90F.

Driving back downhill the engine and trans cooled off. It’s typical for the engine to cool down to 185-190F on downhill runs, regardless of ambient temperatures. Back in town the trans started to heat up in stop and go traffic along with the air temperature around 100F. Once the fan turned on the temperature stabilized. Stopped in traffic, the air temperature can rise significantly from the vehicles in front of you. The coolant temperature from ScanGauge never got above 200 for the entire trip.

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Something I am considering is to reverse the ATF flow between the air and rad coolers. I’d run the ATF through the air cooler first and then the rad cooler. The higher temperature ATF in the air cooler should improve the heat loss and lower the heat load on the engine cooling system. Whether it would be a wash because the hotter air from the air cooler would be flowing through the radiator is a reasonable question. To swap the hoses requires the NXRocks rad skid to be dropped which is a job. Based on my data there doesn’t appear to be any cooling issues for me that require additional modifications, but it is something I’m thinking about.

I’ll try to answer any questions.

Cheers,
Jeff
 
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#6 ·
Amazing! Thanks for the great info.

Every plot showing the AT pan temp shows that it remains the most stable of all the temperatures, surprisingly, even in stop and go traffic. It hardly ever gets over 170 or so. Also clear is that the rad ATF cooler regularly drops the fluid temp by about 20*.

This post makes me really glad I just installed a new radiator and put the ATF cooling back to stock. I did drive for over a year with it bypassed -- definitely time to do the PMF and get some fresh fluid in there.

BTW, good to see you are in NM! I was looking at the plots and suddenly starting recognizing all the street names hahaha. I live in ABQ.
 
#8 ·
Thanks for the interest and compliments.

I want to remind everyone that the ATF temperatures can rise to dangerous levels in cool weather. The data collected last year in Colorado demonstrated that long uphill grades in too high a gear, even though it is an automatic, can generate heat.

While the “Auto vs. Manual” mudslinging continues, I’d like to remind those with automatics that the broad power band of the VQ40 and the factory programming of the auto controller does allow for excessive converter slippage under some conditions. The computer between the drivers ears needs to override the Nissan programming under these conditions. The shift lever is easy to use to select the appropriate gear to maintain sufficient rpm to minimize heat build up.

From the first installment of this topic, http://www.thenewx.org/forum/showpost.php?p=474945&postcount=35:
==========
I'm definitely changing the way I drive the X. The engine has so much torque at low rpm that it masks the need to downshift. The auto calibration doesn’t let a lower gear to be selected when it would be easier on the trans and converter. I suspect it is to maximize gas mileage, even if it happens at the expense of trans life. To be far to Nissan engineers, these conditions are more extreme than most owners would subject the X’s and these conditions are outside of the design requirement parameters. It's too bad the trans doesn't have a selectable performance mode for challenging trails and roads.

I think that as long as a gear is selected to keep the engine rpm above 2200, the stock cooling system with both Rad-ATF and Air-ATF coolers working is adequate. Not all of the logs have both cooler data, but those that do show the effectiveness of the Rad-ATF cooler, especially at low speeds. The Air-ATF cooler is providing cooling at lower speeds but nothing like the Rad-ATF cooler. It is worth noting that the ambient temperatures were typically in the 50 - 60F range, not high by any standards. The trail and highway grades are also high and need to be considered when reviewing the data.
===========

We’re traveling to Ouray, CO, in a few weeks and will be able to collect temperature data with the cooling fan operational. We’re planning on visiting some of the same trails so we should have data to compare.

Cheers,
Jeff
 
#9 ·
We’re traveling to Ouray, CO, in a few weeks and will be able to collect temperature data with the cooling fan operational. We’re planning on visiting some of the same trails so we should have data to compare.
Awesome, can't wait for the trip report (and a look at the comparison).
 
#10 ·
Something I am considering is to reverse the ATF flow between the air and rad coolers. I’d run the ATF through the air cooler first and then the rad cooler. The higher temperature ATF in the air cooler should improve the heat loss and lower the heat load on the engine cooling system. When it would be a wash because the hotter air from the air cooler would be flowing through the radiator is a reasonable question. To swap the hoses requires the NXRocks rad skid to be dropped which is a job. Based on my data there doesn’t appear to be any cooling issues for me that require additional modifications, but it is something I’m thinking about.

I’ll try to answer any questions.

Cheers,
Jeff
Jeff,

I haven't had time yet to examine all of your data (I will), but I wanted to address this first. I wouldn't recommend doing this, as I believe it will lower the overall heat transfer efficiency.

While you will gain some heat transfer in the air / air cooler due to the higher DeltaT, recall that a portion of that heat is then carried into the radiator behind it, lowering the deltaT of the air / coolant.

You would also lower the deltaT between the ATF cooler in the radiator and the coolant, thereby lowering the heat transfer rate at that point of the system.

The engine radiator and cooling system has plenty of design margin in its ability to remove enough heat from the system. Recall that the boiling point of the system pressurized to 14 psi would be around 236F.
 
#11 ·
BTW, with my Bullydog measuring the ATF temperatures, I've observed my highest temps at highway speeds going up long, steep grades, when the transmission has downshifted to 4th and the TC isn't locked. All that slippage and the fluid temps climb. Manually turning on my electric fan (lo speed though) doesn't help in this situation. Then engine coolant temperature doesn't change a bit here though...
 
#13 ·
gpz, reversing the flow direction makes for an interesting thought experiment for all of the reasons you mention. It’s difficult to predict the outcome because there are so many unknown factors. Regardless, it makes for an interesting discussion.

There isn’t a performance problem that is driving the thought process, just an intellectual interest. If it was easier to get at the hoses I’d probably do the experiment. R&Ring the NXRocks rad skid is too much like work to do it just for the information.

The auxiliary fan has improved the cooling performance of the ATF cooling system enough that I’m satisfied. The fan has sufficient power to move air through the AC condenser and radiator. Even at 50-65mph the fan improves cooling. No question that towing uphill is severe use that stresses the engine and trans cooling systems. A fan is easy to add to the air cooler if trans temperatures are a concern.

Jeff
 
#15 ·
gpz, reversing the flow direction makes for an interesting thought experiment for all of the reasons you mention. It’s difficult to predict the outcome because there are so many unknown factors. Regardless, it makes for an interesting discussion.
Not that difficult to predict. Remember that heat transfer rate, (Qdot), is equal to the mass flow rate (Mdot) X the specific heat of the fluid (Cp) X the difference in temperatures (DeltaT). Its linear, and some of the terms can simply be neglected, e.g. the mass flow rate is the same for both the radiator ATF cooler and the air ATF cooler, and the specific heat is the same since it is all ATF. So it all comes down to the DeltaT.

I'll neglect discusion of the specific heats of the engine coolant and the air, and the differences in surface areas of each heat exchanger. With this in mind, and mindful of the conditions that I previously stated, (that the increased heat exchanged in the air ATF cooler goes into the air that goes into the radiator, etc.), it becomes intuitively obvious for me... but then again, heat transfer is one of my disciplines. The math will support my argument, as would an actual experimental run with your data acquisition system.
 
#14 ·
I probably ought to look into getting a pusher fan like yours. Right now all I've done is tap a power circuit into the electric puller fan behind the radiator so I can manually initiate the low speed via a switch on my dash (all automatic functions still work). It helps at slow speeds, but not so much at high speeds. I was thinking about adding a second power circuit so I could activate the high speed too.

If I recall, the fan you added is only thermostatically controlled?
 
#16 ·
The fan and controller are purchased separately. The fan can be controlled with a switch alone, or with the thermostatic controller and an override switch. The 10" fan draws less than 6 amps according to Derale's specs.

Jeff
 
#18 ·
Some of the data collected in Colorado. I'll just present the data where there is a similar log from last year to allow for ease of comparing data, showing the comparable plot from last year first.

We did the same stretch from Ouray up the Mineral Creek trail to Mineral point, similar to last year. We did not take the trail up to Engineer Pass so that tough section is missing. The ambient temperature this year was about 20 degrees warmer, but the ATF temepratures were still lower. Consistently, when the fan turns on, the ATF temperatures would drop; and when it turned off, the ATF temperatures would rise.

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In higher ambient temperatures, the ATF temperatures may not drop but there is definitely increased cooling capacity.

We made the trip to the East Portal on the Gunnison River at Black Canyon Of the Gunnison NP. The road is posted at a 16% grade. The ambient temperature was similar to last year so the data is more directly comparable. Again, the fan kept the ATF temperature from rising as high as just normal airflow.

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Something worth noting is the coolant temperature entering the engine. After the coolant flows through the radiator and loses heat, the ATF-rad heat exchanger adds heat. The temperture of the coolant tracks the temperature of the ATF entering the rad. As the ATF temperature rises, the coolant temperature rises also. Reducing the temperature of the ATF reduces the heat the cooling system needs to manage.

I'm pleased with the added cooling capacity from the fan. Changing my driving to use lower gears to reduce the slipping of the torque converter also reduces the heat generated in the transmission. While this doesn't increase the performance of the driveline, it does help keep the ATF temperatures in a better range and does reduce the cooling load on the cooling system.

Cheers,
Jeff
 
#20 ·
Compare by-passed rad cooler?

I would be curious to see a graph showing temperatures in a by-passed rad/tranny cooler with the added cooling fan, compared with a factory set-up . Even just for a driving around town comparison... How much higher would the ATF run without the rad cooler.