cliffs?
GR86/BRZ (ZN8/ZD8) Thread - That new hotness
- golftdibrad1
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Desertbreh wrote: ↑Thu Sep 15, 2022 4:28 pm I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.
- coogles
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I jumped around a bit, because ain't nobody got time for 90 minutes between those two. But here's what I gathered -
- The idea that it's only the fastest drivers on sticky icky 200TW tires experiencing this issue is bunk. This guy (900BRZ) had never driven on track prior to owning his '22 BRZ, and is running an entirely stock car other than some camber and caster mods up front to help reduce tire wear. He was able to create these oil pressure drops before he hit his tenth track day, and probably only because he wasn't logging oil pressure earlier than that.
- The current baffle plates on the market are all horizontal baffles and have shown limited improvement. What they think will help the most and likely solve the issue for most drivers is a pan with vertical baffles.
Versus their "Super G" oil pan, which uses vertical baffles -
The latter prevents oil from sloshing up the sides, front, or back of the oil pan during higher G driving, and both increase sump capacity from the factory 4.2 quarts to 6 quarts. That means it would take longer for the oil pump to drain the sump even if oil isn't draining back down into the pan during high G corners, and it prevents what oil is there from sloshing up and away from the pickup.
- They're able to mitigate this issue by short shifting. It seems that with lower engine speed and thus lower oil pump speeds, the sump isn't draining as quickly and so the engine doesn't see these oil pressure drops. This would suggest that a combination of a larger sump (if there's room) and these vertical baffles should solve the issue for most cars.
- fledonfoot
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If anyone is interested, I have a set of 4 Michelin Pilot Sport All Season 4 tires in the 18" size available. Maybe all of 1500 highway cruising miles on them, 9/32" all around. Used them as "winters" for two months when I had the car. $600 shipped for the set. $500 local pickup in/around Philly.
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- golftdibrad1
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nice cliffs thanks.coogles wrote: ↑Fri Jul 21, 2023 8:19 amI jumped around a bit, because ain't nobody got time for 90 minutes between those two. But here's what I gathered -
- The idea that it's only the fastest drivers on sticky icky 200TW tires experiencing this issue is bunk. This guy (900BRZ) had never driven on track prior to owning his '22 BRZ, and is running an entirely stock car other than some camber and caster mods up front to help reduce tire wear. He was able to create these oil pressure drops before he hit his tenth track day, and probably only because he wasn't logging oil pressure earlier than that.
We can see examples of this in the two versions of Killer B's cast oil pans for the EJ. Here's their basic version (note the horizontal baffles) -
- The current baffle plates on the market are all horizontal baffles and have shown limited improvement. What they think will help the most and likely solve the issue for most drivers is a pan with vertical baffles.
Versus their "Super G" oil pan, which uses vertical baffles -
The latter prevents oil from sloshing up the sides, front, or back of the oil pan during higher G driving, and both increase sump capacity from the factory 4.2 quarts to 6 quarts. That means it would take longer for the oil pump to drain the sump even if oil isn't draining back down into the pan during high G corners, and it prevents what oil is there from sloshing up and away from the pickup.
- They're able to mitigate this issue by short shifting. It seems that with lower engine speed and thus lower oil pump speeds, the sump isn't draining as quickly and so the engine doesn't see these oil pressure drops. This would suggest that a combination of a larger sump (if there's room) and these vertical baffles should solve the issue for most cars.
I'm .... FLABBERGASTED that people make and sell an oil pan with 'baffles' that are not vertical. Baffles in fluid sumps are understood to be vertical. I can't see anything that horizontal hot garbe is doing other than reducing sloshing and keeping oil out of the crank, but most engines come with some kind of windage tray/scraper these days for that issue.
Desertbreh wrote: ↑Thu Sep 15, 2022 4:28 pm I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.
- coogles
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Cliffs are one of the guys doing the oil pressure testing is also a mechanical engineer and came up with a CAD design with his ideas, using a vertical baffle and a revised windage tray. He worked with Verus Engineering to refine the design and manufacture the prototype(s), which is being tested by this 900BRZ dude this weekend.
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WOW
- Desertbreh
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What? The baffle literally failed, breaking off and blocking the oil intake. Should have hired Cale to fab that pan. So you design a baffle, but you fail to weld it properly to the pan? Retarded.
- golftdibrad1
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exactly.
Although all this fucking around with baffles....baffles me. its just not the answer here given the design of a boxer with its low placement in the vehicle. The accumulator or an oversize pan to cheat a couple three extra quarts into the engine is the clear answer.
Desertbreh wrote: ↑Thu Sep 15, 2022 4:28 pm I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.
- coogles
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golftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 7:54 am exactly.
Although all this fucking around with baffles....baffles me. its just not the answer here given the design of a boxer with its low placement in the vehicle. The accumulator or an oversize pan to cheat a couple three extra quarts into the engine is the clear answer.
I was reading through the comments and he even mentions that they think this is less of an oil control issue and more of an oil return issue. That theory is supported by the improvements being seeing from overfilling, but you're limited in the ability to do that due to cavitation risks. Hence...bigger pan. As said at the very end of the video, though, there isn't much room to do that given the placement of the OEM header, so it'd likely have to be a pan and header combination to grant the needed clearance. But yeah, if you could get the thing from 5 qts to 6.5 or something like that, it'd go a long way toward reducing or even eliminating this issue in most scenarios.
- golftdibrad1
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exactly, this is ALWAYS an issue with flat engines. Its why all 911's (until recently, now its integrated or whatever, same idea) had dry sump systems. In sustained high gee corners the oil supplied to the heads will tend to stay in half of them. V-engines will still tend to drain oil from the heads. This is prob exacerbated if poor design allows the oil level at high gee on one side to cover or reverse flow INTO the drains of that bank's heads. A baffle might help that issue specifically, but the answer is really an accumulator.coogles wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 10:10 amgolftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 7:54 am exactly.
Although all this fucking around with baffles....baffles me. its just not the answer here given the design of a boxer with its low placement in the vehicle. The accumulator or an oversize pan to cheat a couple three extra quarts into the engine is the clear answer.
he even mentions that they think this is less of an oil control issue and more of an oil return issue.
Desertbreh wrote: ↑Thu Sep 15, 2022 4:28 pm I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.
Oh yeah, I'm with you there, just acknowledging that these very small companies with minimal real R&D capabilities can be a little bit questionable on a mission critical component. Like this dude is a random end user volunteer and they blew up his car, that is pretty rough.
I mean, better reliability and maybe some extra powah/soundz with header replacement? Count me incoogles wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 10:10 amgolftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 7:54 am exactly.
Although all this fucking around with baffles....baffles me. its just not the answer here given the design of a boxer with its low placement in the vehicle. The accumulator or an oversize pan to cheat a couple three extra quarts into the engine is the clear answer.
I was reading through the comments and he even mentions that they think this is less of an oil control issue and more of an oil return issue. That theory is supported by the improvements being seeing from overfilling, but you're limited in the ability to do that due to cavitation risks. Hence...bigger pan. As said at the very end of the video, though, there isn't much room to do that given the placement of the OEM header, so it'd likely have to be a pan and header combination to grant the needed clearance. But yeah, if you could get the thing from 5 qts to 6.5 or something like that, it'd go a long way toward reducing or even eliminating this issue in most scenarios.
- coogles
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@D Griff
https://carsandbids.com/auctions/rk46d8 ... al-edition
My latest Carvana offer jumped to $29,900. It might be time.
https://carsandbids.com/auctions/rk46d8 ... al-edition
My latest Carvana offer jumped to $29,900. It might be time.
last 10th AE went for $35k on there, I’m guessing value is down now, curious to see. $30k ain’t bad… if you must, may as wellcoogles wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 4:17 pm @D Griff
https://carsandbids.com/auctions/rk46d8 ... al-edition
My latest Carvana offer jumped to $29,900. It might be time.
- coogles
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Dang. Only bid to $30,750, although that was from a dealer so I'm sure they'd have listed it for quite a bit more.D Griff wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 8:55 pmlast 10th AE went for $35k on there, I’m guessing value is down now, curious to see. $30k ain’t bad… if you must, may as wellcoogles wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 4:17 pm @D Griff
https://carsandbids.com/auctions/rk46d8 ... al-edition
My latest Carvana offer jumped to $29,900. It might be time.