jamie N
Well-Known Member
Just mulling the point, the engine that I've just rebuilt had an enormous salt build up inside the barrel, with about '75%' of the volume taken up with these salt crystals. As a part of the rebuild, I was renewing the exhaust elbow anyway, which is where the thermostat is sited, with a stainless unit and no thermostat, and just having the cooling water cool and then out of the exhaust. The most basic system.
I searched around for info on this and it appeared to show that above 60°C-70°C the salts will attach themselves to the internals of the barrel, gradually building up and blocking the cooling water. This happens when the thermostat becomes 'a little' bit blocked and on shutdown of a hot engine.
This raises the question in the title? I understand it on an engine with a heat exchanger, and I understand that the engine temp is desirable at about 75°C-85°C but it does seem to be a bit daft on a raw water engine, even with good anodes for corrosion.
I searched around for info on this and it appeared to show that above 60°C-70°C the salts will attach themselves to the internals of the barrel, gradually building up and blocking the cooling water. This happens when the thermostat becomes 'a little' bit blocked and on shutdown of a hot engine.
This raises the question in the title? I understand it on an engine with a heat exchanger, and I understand that the engine temp is desirable at about 75°C-85°C but it does seem to be a bit daft on a raw water engine, even with good anodes for corrosion.