How much oil in 1500?

How much oil in 1500?

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BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
been engaging in a bit of DIY over the winter, now that's a scary thought. Was trying to measure how much oil came out, but as most of it went over me, it was a bit hard!

It looks to me like it needs between 5-6 litres to go back in. is that about right? That's with the dry sump tank emptied and the sump off (don't ask!). And yes I am planning on putting the sump back on before putting the oil in!

Cheers
Bert

splitpin

2,740 posts

198 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
yikes

I would start with 5 litres (maybe a tad less) and do a very gentle first stage warm up as per The Bible; having & utilising the proper dipstick compulsory, ideally with a competent helper to do the dipping.

And don't start or restart the engine without the filler cap firmly screwed on the dry sump tank! Only an idiot would ever do that (in other words, I did once ............ never again, if only for the well-being of DD's paper towel supplies!)

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
Yep, I was going to do the initial fill 4-5l and crank with the plugs out to get pressure. Then top up before starting. And I learned about not taking the top off with the engine running with my first dry sumped car!

Trouble is, I don't think that 30 hours of running is enough to get the oil warm enough to get the level right. So I'll have to have a refresh, then it'll take another 30 hours to get warm to check the oil... biggrin

splitpin

2,740 posts

198 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
BertBert said:
Yep, I was going to do the initial fill 4-5l and crank with the plugs out to get pressure. Then top up before starting. And I learned about not taking the top off with the engine running with my first dry sumped car!

Trouble is, I don't think that 30 hours of running is enough to get the oil warm enough to get the level right. So I'll have to have a refresh, then it'll take another 30 hours to get warm to check the oil... biggrin
On the former, disconnect the coils before doing so!

On the latter, The Bible's procedure in combo with gaffer tape on the oil rad and a blanket wrapped around the engine post stop (watch it and your hands on the exhaust) should get you upto 50degC without too much difficulty.

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
splitpin said:
On the former, disconnect the coils before doing so!
I assume you can achieve the same by cranking with the ignition off. That's what I always do when I try to start it, followed by that embarrassing bang when everyone knows what a Muppet you've been!

bloberoo

92 posts

159 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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YES,I always did the measuring what got drained method,and yes it does eat into the running time to check levels properly "to the book",but being oil you can definitely see what they mean by its a "VISCOUS" circle.....smile..6/6.5 litres depending on age/spec of tanks coolers etc[Did you drop the cooler lines etc?,hard to keep clean though granted}

XG332

3,927 posts

188 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
Having just finished an engine install today i can still remember this one.

+ 5L in oil tank
Crank over, ignition off and coil disconnected to circulate oil and check pressure is reading.
Check level and bring up to between top and middle mark on the SR3 dipstick.
Reconnect coil and run engine to circulate and warm oil.
Recheck and adjust to mark.

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
Thanks all. New bits and gaskets arrived today from RPE, so all set for the weekend (whole new meaning on something for the weekend sir?).

gaxor

331 posts

253 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Just out of interest, are you reverting to the Silkolene or sticking with Shell?

paulmj

80 posts

229 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Interesting one. I switched from silkolene to the castrol equivalent and found a lower hot oil temp and better hot oil pressure at tickover. That was with the Clubsport. I'm considering doing the same in the SR3. Any thoughts?

Also, what is the official warm up procedure and is there a recognised warm down procedure?

splitpin

2,740 posts

198 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Hi Paul

Here > http://www.radicalperformanceengines.com/assets/up...

Item 9 for Warm-Up.

Cheers

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
9. Warming Up
a. The engine should be started 45 minutes prior to going on track. Turn the engine off when the coolant temperature reaches 85°C and allow heat to soak into the engine. Restart 5 minutes before going on track and get the coolant temperature back up to 75°C. . Please refer to the RPE GSX-R Engine Operation Manual, our specific operating manual, for engine running temperatures.
b. The oil level should be checked every hour of running and topped up to the level indicated above when necessary.
c. By the way the procedure outlined in a. will get the oil nowhere near the operating temperature required for the minimum described in paragraph 10.
d. So in reality run the engine loads and loads before going out in the vain hope of achieving 60 degrees when the lights go out

biggrin

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
15. Oil temperature control. At RPE we really couldn't be bothered to engineer a sensible solution for this and just bunged it a whopping great oil-cooler to be safe. We experimented with the laws of natural selection and crowd-sourcing for an answer. We are pleased to report that this social experiment has been rather successful and has resulted in the now legendary "gaffa-tape" rules for oil temperature control.

You will notice that the air inlet to the oil cooler is conveniently 3 gaffa-tape widths wide (in "portrait" view). Under no circumstances in the UK will you need less than one strip or "gaffa" as we prefer to call it. Often times 2 gaffas is exactly the right amount. If the race season starts unseasonably early in the season of winter (like a wintery 10th March in Snetterton), then 2 and a half gaffas will be called for. In exceptional circumstances (such as if you have followed our warming up advice in para 9), you may feel the need to run the full-bifta...3 gaffas. However this comes with a stern health warning. If you run 3 gaffas, you have a severe risk of over-heating your oil up to 62 or even 63 degrees. It's also well known (well to us, but we'd rather it was a secret) that if the oil temp gets over 63 degress, the engine oil pressure will drop dramatically and activate the oil pressure cutout switch.

We recommend that teams and drivers become conversant with the "rules of gaffa" and focus their testing time accordingly.

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
I hope Uncle Ted doesn't mind my light-hearted satire, all said with respect, love and humour! It's a brilliantly engineered bit of kit, but I really think the oil temp control is not quite there yet. And nothing I've not said face to face!!

BB

XG332

3,927 posts

188 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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We have special oil tank heaters and side pod blanks for warm ups. How posh.

BertBert

Original Poster:

19,035 posts

211 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
XG332 said:
We have special oil tank heaters and side pod blanks for warm ups. How posh.
That's what you get with a proper team biggrin

dunc_sx

1,608 posts

197 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Extremely funny (and accurate) Bert!

splitpin

2,740 posts

198 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
I'd better join in the spirit of this ........... next time I get approached by someone rattling a worthy charity tin, I'd better just kick him/her in the ankle and run!

Hairdryer and shaped piece of card required for Snett BertBert.

(And let's hope you don't need RPE's help when you're there rofl)

paulmj

80 posts

229 months

Friday 20th January 2012
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Ah - I see..... smile

LCM

444 posts

197 months

Friday 20th January 2012
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BertBert said:
9. Warming Up
d. So in reality run the engine loads and loads before going out in the vain hope of achieving 60 degrees when the lights go out biggrin
I never ran an oil cooler on Betty (short runs etc) but for the first couple of months still had trouble getting the oil hot until the engine was under load and then the temp went vertical. We fitted a small Mocal heat exchanger and warmed up the engine with the electric fan running and found that during warm up on a normal warm but not hot English Sunday the temps went up in step with the water 20 deg hotter than the oil which is just what Powerted ordered. We run the same set up successfully on the Force but now with fan and pump controlled by the Life.

Interestingly, this is the arrrangement that Big R now use on SR8s (2 water rads, gearbox rad and a HUGE mocal oil/water heat exchanger).

But, as JW von Goethe said, "Every great idea has already been thought, suffice to think it again". Except of course he said it in German......................