2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
Sounds good, and I don't think you'll be the type who needs to worry about "paralysis by analysis" (too much information confusing things leading to an inability to make a decision)
If you want more info, I'm sure a search of this forum or wikipedia will show you many pictures and diagrams.See, didn't have to go too far at all{Page 3} Post 24 in this thread. It's between the black air con radiator, and the "normal" radiator.![]()
Last edited by gregozedobe; 02-02-2009 at 11:07 PM.
2017 MY18 Golf R 7.5 Wolfsburg wagon (boring white) delivered 21 Sep 2017, 2008 Octavia vRS wagon 2.0 TFSI 6M (bright yellow), 2006 T5 Transporter van 2.5 TDI 6M (gone but not forgotten).
You know me, drill first, ask questions later....
On that my oil is sitting at 180 deg F on cruising, climbing to 200 F if I'm up it at the sump. A much better location, I can see real time heat buildup and drop in the oil. That's 82 - 93 deg C in new speak.
I had planned to monitor real coolant temps with one of my digital therm channels, but I can get real time Vag com readings, so I'll do some monitoring in the traffic once I get my head around it properly.
I'm loving the acceleration data!! 7.5 and 15.7 at 118kph thus far...
Last edited by Greg Roles; 02-02-2009 at 11:14 PM.
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
That seems like pretty good oil temps. It may go a bit higher still if you go up a long, steepish uphill climb, as that will get the turbo working harder for longer.
I believe a hard working turbo puts a fair bit of heat into both the coolant AND the oil on water cooled turbo diesels. I certainly notice the heater kicking in much better on my TDI when I go up hills on frosty Canberra mornings and nights (and I look forward to some cooler weather again after our curent heat wave ends). The heater can then actually cool down again as you go down a long downhill if the engine isn't fully warmed up yet (very thermodynamically efficient these modern TDIs).
Speaking of cool weather, when we do finally get some, I'd be very interested in how much longer it takes to warm your engine oil up after the coolant has reached 90C ie how long does it take for a TDI engine to reach proper operating temperature in both coolant AND engine oil ? A lot of people think that once the coolant has warmed up you can then flog your engine, but in cold weather I suspect it may be quite some time after that before your oil is properly warmed up as well.
2017 MY18 Golf R 7.5 Wolfsburg wagon (boring white) delivered 21 Sep 2017, 2008 Octavia vRS wagon 2.0 TFSI 6M (bright yellow), 2006 T5 Transporter van 2.5 TDI 6M (gone but not forgotten).
You're spot on greggo, I've noticed it takes about 10 minutes of regular traffic for the oil to both show some temp rise, and to drop in viscosity. Normal oil operating pressure is 20-60 psi on my gauge, and at revs when it's cold it's showing up to 100. I am suprised that the oil is running "around" engine coolant temps, in the sump at least. I'm sure once it goes through the turbo it's a different story! At least VW had the good sense to run the oil through the cooler, then direct to turbo, then back to engine. I'm still nutting out the best way to boost that cooling, either by increasing the water cooling component of the oil cooler ( small effect ) or by actually cooling the oil or the pipe on the way to the turbo. I am reluctant to increase the volume between the cooler and the turbo, so that the turbo bearings still get oil on startup in the shortest possible time. All in the aim of countering future boost increases.
I've no qualitative data as yet, but as a rough guide it takes about twice as long for the oil to show some heat rise as it does for the coolant to show operating temps. It's the main reason I installed an oil temp gauge, as on my old ford GT I used to wait for the oil to heat up before flogging it in any way, and the TDI is no different, even if it is a tractor!
I'll be monitoring it over the coming weeks and will see if I can expand on that.
Last edited by Greg Roles; 03-02-2009 at 07:09 PM.
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
Well I can confirm that on the drive it, when I checked at traffic lights, that the water temp guage showed normal 90 degree operation from 83 to 92 degrees according to Vag com. It didn't rise much above 92 at any point of sitting idle.
The oil temps took longer to rise, and I'd say that with a quiet drive in the oil wasn't showing temps for a good 5kms. Water was up, according to the VW gauge in half the time.
Oil sat at around 82 degrees once at temp, which corresponds to my 180 F reading on the aftermarket gauge.
No boosting on the way in, and would be kinda hard to drive it so AND look at laptop Vag readings. Wil have to enroll my girlie, bet she'll be thrilled!![]()
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
good to hear some hard data coming out of all of this cog - nice work.
i have no temp guages apart from the in dash coolant temp in my mk3 as yet - i use the oil pressure readings as my temperature reading too - just by looking for the telltale drop in viscosity as it warms up.
I have to say that after hearing your temps though, i'm very interested to put some guages in my car.
my coolant temp guage reads a cool 75 deg on the cruise, and will idle up to 90-95 sitting still in traffic.... UNLESS the a/c is on, in which case the dual fans come on behind the radiator and cools it right back down to about 79deg.... this got me thinking about hte heat soak in traffic thing - probably best just to switch on the a/c and let the radiator fans pull ait through hte intercooler for you.
still no EGT readings???
'07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
'98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
'99 A4 Quattro 1.8T
Haven't hooked up the probe for my aftermarket EGT gauge as yet, need to weld in a port or splice the stock one, but I've no doubt I'll be able to track it on vag com via the stock probe. I can get several temps at once, and I just need to use my digital probes to confirm what each one is.
Don't worry, my propane and tune plan means EGT's are critical to monitor.
2014 Skoda Yeti TDI Outdoor 4x4 | Audi Q3 CFGC repower | Darkside tune and Race Cams | Darkside dump pDPF | Wagner Comp IC | Snow Water Meth | Bilstein B6 H&R springs | Rays Homura 2x7 18 x 8" 255 Potenza Sports | Golf R subframe | Superpro sways and bushings | 034 engine mounts | MK6 GTI brakes |
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