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Originally Posted by
Preen59
All very interesting. Have you thought about allowing the heat to escape more easily?? (Via the rear of the bonnet perhaps).
It's to some extent unavoidable that you will get heat sink, but you have to remove air to let more in, so the way i see it, if you allow more hot air to escape out the top at the back, you will allow more cool air in at the bottom in the front..
I'd be a bit careful doing this, as while this idea may work great when you are stopped at the lights, I have a vague idea that when you are driving along the highway (ie at speed), the bottom of the windscreen is a high air pressure zone, so you could end up with some air trying to go backwards from the rear of the bonnet back out through the grille - not good for cooling at all
Of course I could be totally wrong (again), so it might be worthwhile doing some pressure testing at various speeds to see where the air will want to flow easily (or not). As always, empirical, in-situ evidence from a well designed experiment will prevail over nice-sounding theories every time
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).
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