As mentioned by Joe at turbolabs I had a hot oil pan. I checked with an IR gun. Some spots of the oil pan were 350 degrees. Also the stroker gives off a bunch more heat than stock. Now that it is warming up I am getting nervous about the cooling system.
The engine has not over heated, I am just trying to keep it from becoming an issue.
So first thing was to swap in full synthetic oil that doesn't start to break down at 250 degrees.
Second was some cheesy heat shields. Using the IR gun these have helped a lot. Oil Pan temp on the middle of my new flat spot was over 350 before installing the heat shield, now it is about 240. I still have some spots that are over 300 but most of the pan is under 250. I made these from some aluminum I had laying around hose clamped to the exhaust.
The next mod, and yet another part from a Grand Cherokee, The Napa 272310 fan clutch. Apparently if you are going to do this mod, use this part number at Napa to get the right part. It doesn't seem to cross over to other parts stores correctly, it looks like at Oreilly this part number will get you the OEM XJ fan clutch. The internet says that this clutch keeps the mechanical fan spinning faster, guesses are like 10-30% faster than OEM XJ. The internet also says that this fan clutch will create a bunch of noise and power loss. One thing I do agree with is that if you need this fan clutch you probably have something wrong with your cooling system. Well the problem with my cooling system is that it was designed for a 15% smaller motor that the stock exhaust wasn't really close to the oil pan.
So a quick drive, I can hear it especially from about 2500-3500 rpm, over 3500 the engine/exhaust is louder than the fan. I also really notice it when I down shift. It is not un-bearable, but I have 37 inch mtr's, and gear driven t-case so the Jeep makes plenty of other noise. I don't really think it is much louder than the electric fan. In the quick drive I couldn't get the temp gauge to go above 210. In similar situations the temp was just a bit above 210 most of the time. So with one quick drive it seems to have helped 5-10 degrees if the factory gauge is to be trusted.
So to help out with the hot oil, I remembered that from about 1992-1996 Ford added an oil cooler that mounted to where the oil filter mounted. They only put it on the 351's and use a shorter oil filter. We all know that the Motorcraft FL-1A is my filter of choice for the XJ. So if this oil cooler will mount to a Ford engine with a FL-1A, why wouldn't it mount to a Jeep engine with a FL-1A?
Ford liked this cooler so much they use it on gas Superdutys, however it uses a bigger hex key to remove it so the engine side mount may be different. (I have seen it on every gas SD I have looked at) This cooler is also popular with the Mustang guys since it will easily install on any 302/351. This oil cooler with the shorter filter is about 1 inch longer than the Motorcraft FL-1A. (EFI 460's got a much bigger oil cooler but routing the lower radiator hose over wasn't going to happen)
Ford has a plastic fitting on the lower radiator hose, so that this gets coolant coming right out of the radiator, which is much better than where I am going to get coolant from, but this will be a clean and easy install.
And I have installed yet another Ford part on the Jeep... (this one was from a E350 van with a 351)(I also painted it some kind of Chrysler Red)
Some pictures...
I have not run coolant to it yet but I am just going to route the coolant that is returning from the heater core into the oil cooler and then from the oil cooler back to the cooling system. Measured with the IR gun the lower radiator hose was way under 200 degrees, like 170-180. The hose coming back from the heater core was 210. That is why Ford has it plumbed into the lower radiator hose.
I am making sure it doesn't leak oil before I run coolant to it. In the second picture you can see the hoses going to and coming from the heater core. I have rags stuffed into the fittings on the cooler to keep junk from getting into it. (starter is removed in first picture, this made the install easier) I used a Napa filter since I was there buying a fan clutch anyway. This filter is the same filter that is used on Superdutys, so I guess I can forget the FL-1A and learn the Motorcraft FL820S, which now the Jeep, and my Ford V10 use.
When I get it plumbed I will add pictures.
And yes I realize that I am cooling the oil with coolant, therefore putting more strain on my already marginal cooling system, but the hot oil will put heat into the coolant in the block so I am thinking that the oil cooler will have a marginal effect on overall coolant temp.
Too help keep the stroker cool I installed a FlowKooler water pump when I assembled the motor, and afterwards I added a hood vent (look back a few posts for the hood vent). I replaced the radiator a few years back, I am pretty sure it is a 2 core radiator. It is aluminum core with plastic tanks.
So the only cooling system upgrade I would have left would be to get a high performance radiator. Having the exhaust re-done again so it doesn't run so close to the pan should help too.
Questions?
Thanks!