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Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
gt4dude wrote:switching on the intercooler pump should be done by another method though, like with psi, throttle or speed.
st205 runs for 20 sec triggered by pressing the throttle,
reason being is if you circulate water while stationary, you spread heat soak through the entire system, so when you do get moving, theres more water that needs to be cooled down before you can get your charge cooler full of ambient temp water.
i think circulating water by temperature is going to either give you a delay in activation, or triggered by heat soak while stationary
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
MrOizo wrote:Maybe a arduino could be something to consider. Might be hugely overkill but could have different triggers. A temp trigger and a speed one.
I'm only getting into arduinos but they almost limitless! They're a microcontroller. Good fun to muck around with:)
gt4dude wrote:How are you planning to make your ice box?
At first I considered running the W2A coolant directly through a box of ice,
But thinking about it, once the ice runs out, it's going to fill up with warm water and the charge cooler will never get cold, then another idea struck me
if you tack down a couple oil coolers into a closed box you could keep the W2A water and the ice separate so there's no reservoir for warm water to collect, and every time your ice melts you don't have to tip out coolant.
it also means you don't have to switch on taps every time you go racing and then back to street driving
sergei wrote:Intercooler pump:
switch it by duty cycle - say, 1min on 3 min off, factory algorithm is a bit more complex (it depends on Throttle and speed sensor as far as I am aware).
Intercooler fan:
switch it on using the water temperature sensor - off the shelf thermo-switches will not do - switching temperature too high for them (~90'C?). When water above ~50'C you will need to turn on the fan.
I will be controlling these two things using spare Inputs/Outputs on my Link G3 (with G4 firmware). So all I need to wire is a bosch water temp sensor (~$40 with plug, from msel.co.nz) and couple of relays.
Toyota thermoswitches are normally connected (they open circuit when temperature is reached), so you will need to use contacts that are disconnected under power on relay.
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
Dell'Orto wrote:MrOizo wrote:Maybe a arduino could be something to consider. Might be hugely overkill but could have different triggers. A temp trigger and a speed one.
I'm only getting into arduinos but they almost limitless! They're a microcontroller. Good fun to muck around with:)
A who? Remember, electronics not my thing. I'm interested in the speed switching one, I see VDO do a few types of speed output units, but fitting one somewhere could be the fiddly bit.gt4dude wrote:How are you planning to make your ice box?
At first I considered running the W2A coolant directly through a box of ice,
But thinking about it, once the ice runs out, it's going to fill up with warm water and the charge cooler will never get cold, then another idea struck me
if you tack down a couple oil coolers into a closed box you could keep the W2A water and the ice separate so there's no reservoir for warm water to collect, and every time your ice melts you don't have to tip out coolant.
it also means you don't have to switch on taps every time you go racing and then back to street driving
Hadn't really thought about it too hard at this point, its definitely something I want to do in the future. I like the idea of using a seperate heat exchanger in a enclosed ice box though!sergei wrote:Intercooler pump:
switch it by duty cycle - say, 1min on 3 min off, factory algorithm is a bit more complex (it depends on Throttle and speed sensor as far as I am aware).
Intercooler fan:
switch it on using the water temperature sensor - off the shelf thermo-switches will not do - switching temperature too high for them (~90'C?). When water above ~50'C you will need to turn on the fan.
I will be controlling these two things using spare Inputs/Outputs on my Link G3 (with G4 firmware). So all I need to wire is a bosch water temp sensor (~$40 with plug, from msel.co.nz) and couple of relays.
Toyota thermoswitches are normally connected (they open circuit when temperature is reached), so you will need to use contacts that are disconnected under power on relay.
Ok - so how would I achieve something similar with a stock ECU? Fan switch is a piece of cake though.
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