E36 M3 Evo oil cooling
E36 M3 Evo oil cooling
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Discussion

andygtt

Original Poster:

8,345 posts

287 months

Monday 24th August 2009
quotequote all
I took my std M3 evo on track recently and it behaved impeciably with the exception that the oil temperature.

A friend has said that this is comon and thus I figure the guys who regularly track theirs must put a cooler on it so was wondering what people have done and how just so I can get ideas before I start buying parts.

any pics or advice would be appreciated

E36GUY

5,906 posts

241 months

Monday 24th August 2009
quotequote all
The M3 evo already has an oil cooler on it. Under intensive track use, in my car the oil temp will probably rise to just over the 100 mark which is only a 10 degree increase on normal operating temperature which doesn't seem to bad to me. I'm happy to be corrected however.

iguana

7,301 posts

283 months

Monday 24th August 2009
quotequote all
Concerned my oil was running too hot on track, I did a little survey of all the guys I knew running e36 M3s on track, about 10 cars all in all.

The main percentage ran bang in the middle or at a fraction over the middle even on hot days- (there are Farenheit & Centigrade types of guage on difernt cars but middle roughly equates to 100deg C) only 2 cars + mine of all those were running higher.

I was seeing up to 130deg C, about 3/4s on the guage, had no other issues & was fine on road or brief track, but on longer sessions I just diddnt like to see my oil so hot.

I recently put in a new cooler ordered from ecp for a 325td as bmw prices are silly & is the same part no, & when it arrived is one row larger than stock so hardly a big increase but every little helps as Asda say smile & it has done the job perfectly, just done 3 scorching track days in france & temps bang in the middle to a fraction over, perfect.

Also the oil cooler ducting can & does either become dislodged or sag down & block the airflow, mine was sagging & not looking too heathy, so put a new set up on it ditching the stock ducting & built from a couple of carbon sheets & it seems to work v well.

Edited by iguana on Monday 24th August 10:33

scz4

2,758 posts

264 months

Monday 24th August 2009
quotequote all
My Evo runs between 100 & 110 on track. It's normal from what I've seen.

andygtt

Original Poster:

8,345 posts

287 months

Monday 24th August 2009
quotequote all
OK so my car prob already has an oil cooler and thus shouldnt get that hot even on track... It did keep on rising so I suspect it must be an issue.

I will look around and seek a replacement cooler... the 2.5td one suddently looks appealing smile

sniff diesel

13,124 posts

235 months

Monday 21st September 2009
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iguana said:
I recently put in a new cooler ordered for a 325td
Interesting, when I next do an oil change I think I might swap the coolers over from my M3 and the GF's 325td.

dan101smith

17,011 posts

234 months

Monday 21st September 2009
quotequote all
Last track outing saw my oil temp get up to 300F, which worried me somewhat.

A friend of mine with a 3.0 was also getting the same temps, and that was with a new cooler fitted.

They seem to run just over midway, or right up at 300F. I can't get to the bottom of why mine runs hotter though - the cooler is good, it was fresh oil, the ducting is all there...

niels

141 posts

262 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2009
quotequote all
what oil are you using andy?

since I got the new castrol 10W60, temperature increased more than 10 degrees celsius at high labor. At top speed a get 120-130 degrees easily now. In normal use its a bit cooler than before, not more than 90 degrees.

cheers

Niels

Mroad

829 posts

238 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2009
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niels said:
what oil are you using andy?

since I got the new castrol 10W60, temperature increased more than 10 degrees celsius at high labor. At top speed a get 120-130 degrees easily now. In normal use its a bit cooler than before, not more than 90 degrees.

cheers

Niels
That's because it's 60 weight at high temperatures, it's thicker than you should be using.
Use a thinner oil on track, 0W40 to 10W40. Oil temperatures will drop and you'll also gain power.
I use 10W40 on track and have never had an issue.
I bow to the judgement of someone who knows about these things (not me), in the words of Simon from Opieoil "The answer is that thinner oils flow and cool better than thicker ones. Unless 10w-60 is an absolute requirement per BMW, don't use it!"
On the M3 only the S54 requires 10W60, the S50 doesn't.

As for the oil cooler the oil flow through it is controlled by a thermostat in the oil filter housing. If that is not opening then no cooling. It only opens partially anyway, you can get kits to change it to open fully. Check out Bimmerworld or CA Automotive for "oil cooler diverter valve".

dan101smith

17,011 posts

234 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2009
quotequote all
Mroad said:
As for the oil cooler the oil flow through it is controlled by a thermostat in the oil filter housing. If that is not opening then no cooling. It only opens partially anyway, you can get kits to change it to open fully. Check out Bimmerworld or CA Automotive for "oil cooler diverter valve".
I've seen the part available, but do you know how to fit it? If so, could you give me a run-through please?

andygtt

Original Poster:

8,345 posts

287 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2009
quotequote all
This sounds like a promising mod for a track car... very interested in hearing more about it.

Ive been under the car and I think my main problem is a combination of the oil cooler looking absolutelly nackered and that the ducting to the cooler is all missing.

Im going to sort some ducting out and I have given it a fresh oil change of 0/40 mobile 1 and I am going to umm and arr about if I try another track day to see if it gets hot before I replace the expensive cooler.

sniff diesel

13,124 posts

235 months

Monday 23rd November 2009
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Before swapping my M3 engine into my track car, I have been looking at swapping oil coolers with my GF's 325td. It turns out the TD uses the same oil cooler as the M3, it's the TDS that uses the bigger oil cooler:

http://www.realoem.com/bmw/showparts.do?model=CC22...

http://www.realoem.com/bmw/showparts.do?model=CF92...

dan101smith

17,011 posts

234 months

Tuesday 24th November 2009
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Friend of mine was having issues with oil cooling on his 3.0. He has fitted stat blanks for the oil and coolant, and now no more problems.

Having seen the size difference between the M3 and TDS coolers, I can't imagine it'll make a huge difference.

O/T - Did you receive the ARPs?

318is boy

106 posts

225 months

Tuesday 24th November 2009
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i found changing the oil to silkolene 5w 40 causes mine to run approx 10c lower during fast road driving than the previous oil. not sure what was in it when i purchased it. see how it behaves at brands on thursday (if it doesnt rain) and will report back.

dan - are you on the bmw day at brands?

Edited by 318is boy on Tuesday 24th November 17:47

sniff diesel

13,124 posts

235 months

Wednesday 25th November 2009
quotequote all
dan101smith said:
Friend of mine was having issues with oil cooling on his 3.0. He has fitted stat blanks for the oil and coolant, and now no more problems.

Having seen the size difference between the M3 and TDS coolers, I can't imagine it'll make a huge difference.

O/T - Did you receive the ARPs?
Where can I get the stat blanks from? Engine goes in the track car next week so would be nice to get all the jobs sorted first.
If the tds cooler has 7 rows instead of 6 then that's a 17% improvement, every little helps I suppose.

Got the bolts fine thanks Dan, sorry I hadn't mentioned it.

dan101smith

17,011 posts

234 months

Thursday 26th November 2009
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Stat blanks available through BMSport.com, don't think they're particularly expensive either.