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  1. #1
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    Running Too Hot 280F Oil 250F Coolant

    Hey guys, I was wondering if someone has had issues with overheating. I have the Arrow Tune with Pirelli slicks. Car is hitting 280F oil and 250F coolant. Not sure what is going on or if someone else has also experienced this but it never ran this hot before on the track. I did go off into the grass last time I was at the track at the end of May. I came out of the grass with a rock stuck in one of my fans. Got it out but didn’t see any other damage. And now this overheating was occurring same track 3 weeks after. Ambient was 80-95F on the days it was overheating. Just wondering if anyone has dealt with this on the east coast.

    ACR record at Grattan is 1:22 flat. I’m at 1:23.3 now with my TA1 with pads, fluid, and used Pirelli slicks (20+ heat cycles after buying used) along with Arrow tune. Running 325 square and with passenger car is 3800 lbs. Having a blast trying to chase the 1:22 time down.
    Last edited by sadil; 06-28-2020 at 09:22 AM.

  2. #2
    VOA Member 99RT10's Avatar
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    Check to see if the fan is working, blown fuse?
    09 ACR With all the goodies
    99 ACR TT 99 red RT/10 Roe S/C
    97 B/W RT/10 TT 94 RT/10 TT

  3. #3
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    I thought a fan that was not running would cause a CEL.

  4. #4
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    On track your fans aren't doing anything. They are really meant for lower RPM driving. At speed the air is being forced through radiator. You don't say which model car you have. ACRs tend to cool better because the large splitter forces more air through radiator. My TA 2.0 would regularly hit 243 cooland and 265 oil. Dick Winkles says the car is ok up to about 250-255 but it will be pulling timing. Some suggestions. Blast radiator with water from inside out to make sure it is not clogged with debris and grass, Add Water Weter. Add a spring in top radiator hose to prevent collapse under high RPMs. Remove hood vents. Install an underdrive pulley from IPSCO.ORG, it should help if the pump is cavitating. Shift sooner so as not to buzz the motor so high.

    There are several threads on here about this issue. I believe the original owner of Blue TA #1 fought this issue on many fronts and I think he made some progress with a new water pumped whose tolerances were verified by Prefix.

  5. #5
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    George, it is just a regular TA1

    Thank you for the detailed notes. I did reach out to PREFIX as well and Dick said the same thing about cleaning out the rad area and potential issues with the coolant pump cavitation.

    I will remove the bumper and inspect everything. I will also be adding an ACR style splitter so that should help to get some HP air into the rad.

    Any photos of the spring you mentioned? What is this?
    Last edited by sadil; 06-28-2020 at 10:24 AM.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by sadil View Post
    George, it is just a regular TA1

    Thank you for the detailed notes. I did reach out to PREFIX as well and Dick said the same thing about cleaning out the rad area and potential issues with the coolant pump cavitation.

    I will remove the bumper and inspect everything. I will also be adding an ACR style splitter so that should help to get some HP air into the rad.

    Any photos of the spring you mentioned? What is this?
    The spring is to prevent this:



    A little more info in this thread: https://driveviper.com/forums/thread...-Hose-Collapse

  7. #7
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    They are usually catalogued as radiator hose "support springs" or "support coils".

    To see the products, go Summit Racing and search.

  8. #8
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    AZ Viper has solved the cooling issues. He would be a good source for input.

  9. #9
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    I had cooling issues on my ACRE and went back to factory controller instead of Arrow controller and it took care of the issue.

  10. #10
    If you do need to blow out the radiator stack due to ingestion of debris, this is by far the best device I've found and used:
    https://www.radiatorgenie.com/radiator_genie_s/46.htm

    One word of caution, if blowing between heat exchangers (like between the radiator and A/C condenser), the air wand provides so much velocity it pushes back with a lot of energy so hold it firmly to avoid it pushing it into the fins of the other heat exchanger.

    I tried making my own air wands of different designs over the years and nothing, I mean nothing comes close to the air velocity this Radiator Genie produces.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by sadil View Post
    Hey guys, I was wondering if someone has had issues with overheating. I have the Arrow Tune with Pirelli slicks. Car is hitting 280F oil and 250F coolant. Not sure what is going on or if someone else has also experienced this but it never ran this hot before on the track. I did go off into the grass last time I was at the track at the end of May. I came out of the grass with a rock stuck in one of my fans. Got it out but didn’t see any other damage. And now this overheating was occurring same track 3 weeks after. Ambient was 80-95F on the days it was overheating. Just wondering if anyone has dealt with this on the east coast.

    ACR record at Grattan is 1:22 flat. I’m at 1:23.3 now with my TA1 with pads, fluid, and used Pirelli slicks (20+ heat cycles after buying used) along with Arrow tune. Running 325 square and with passenger car is 3800 lbs. Having a blast trying to chase the 1:22 time down.
    On this particular track where your oil got to 280, are you mostly in 2nd or 3rd gear?

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by 1ststrike View Post
    I had cooling issues on my ACRE and went back to factory controller instead of Arrow controller and it took care of the issue.
    I was going to suggest swapping back to the OEM PCM. I've seen numerous reports where the Arrow PCM was the culprit.
    Last edited by 98intrigue; 06-29-2020 at 01:22 PM.

  13. #13
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    I’m running the Arrow PCM and it does run hotter than factory but I always do a few cool down laps when the coolant gauge starts flashing red at 240. I mainly get this hot when using lower gears and reving higher vs one gear higher and lower rpms.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by 98intrigue View Post
    I was going to suggest swapping back to the OEM PCM. I've seen numerous reports were the Arrow PCM was the culprit.
    Sad to hear this. Not acceptable. It is so much fun on the street.

    Quote Originally Posted by Arizona Vipers View Post
    On this particular track where your oil got to 280, are you mostly in 2nd or 3rd gear?
    Hey AZ, yes the entire track mostly 2/3.

    If we were to get technical, 70% 2nd, 25% 3rd, and 5% 4th (just on main straight).

    Track is Grattan Raceway in Michigan.

    Quote Originally Posted by nwa_viper View Post
    I’m running the Arrow PCM and it does run hotter than factory but I always do a few cool down laps when the coolant gauge starts flashing red at 240. I mainly get this hot when using lower gears and reving higher vs one gear higher and lower rpms.
    I didn’t get a flash. And yep low gears are all I use at the smaller local tracks.

    Quote Originally Posted by TrackAire View Post
    If you do need to blow out the radiator stack due to ingestion of debris, this is by far the best device I've found and used:
    https://www.radiatorgenie.com/radiator_genie_s/46.htm

    One word of caution, if blowing between heat exchangers (like between the radiator and A/C condenser), the air wand provides so much velocity it pushes back with a lot of energy so hold it firmly to avoid it pushing it into the fins of the other heat exchanger.

    I tried making my own air wands of different designs over the years and nothing, I mean nothing comes close to the air velocity this Radiator Genie produces.
    Will look into it!

    Quote Originally Posted by 1ststrike View Post
    I had cooling issues on my ACRE and went back to factory controller instead of Arrow controller and it took care of the issue.
    Sad to hear the controller can’t handle some simple tracking.

  15. #15
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    I have seen people modify the grill and it helped a lot, The plastic grill adds a lot of restriction to the flow up front. Also removing the hood vents help. Keep an eye on the Rad hose if it is collapsing it could be causing problems too!

    Best ideas if you want to keep the Arrow

  16. #16
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    I had done back to back testing at the track on my TA 2.0. With the Arrow controller and with the stock controller. Same day, same ambient temps. I noticed NO difference in temps. Dick Winkles said he did not believe the controller would contribute much to the heat issue. He did suggest going with a higher pressure radiator cap which I have done on my ACR-E. On the ACR I rarely see 220 coolant on track. You should insulate the cooling lines that go to the oil cooler as well, they are close to exhaust manifolds and any heat they absorb goes to the oil cooler which can heat the oil which in turns heats the coolant. I would also insulate the wiring harness going to the fuse box. At those temps things can start to get melty.

  17. #17
    I had headers and Arrow PCM installed, went to the track in 90 degree ambient (in Houston), and immediately saw much higher temps. Highest I read was 265 oil and 245 coolant, or thereabouts. The car felt like it was making about 350 hp at that temperature. It sounds like the Arrow PCM is one of the main culprits, but I like it too much on the street to take it off, so I will probably run through all the other suggestions first, short of hacking my grille out.

  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by sadil View Post
    Sad to hear this. Not acceptable. It is so much fun on the street.



    Hey AZ, yes the entire track mostly 2/3.

    If we were to get technical, 70% 2nd, 25% 3rd, and 5% 4th (just on main straight).

    Track is Grattan Raceway in Michigan.
    If you're running full sessions, mostly in 2nd gear and are pushing the car hard it's going to overheat like this. Tracks where you are in 3rd more than 2nd you won't have this problem at all. I solved it, but had to remove my air conditioning condenser and have a 160 thermostat and fans come on at 160 as well. The problem is your sitting on grid at 210 coolant, so your first lap you are already 50* higher than I am. Towards the end of a full session I'm about 250 coolant, 260 oil. If I wasn't running the 160 thermo and fans, I'd hit that much sooner in the session and have to pull off. I'm pretty sure you can send your PCM to Prefix and have them turn the fans on sooner and run the 160* thermostat, you'll be 50 degrees ahead of the game on your first lap.

  19. #19
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    Good info in here. I've seen variations of all these suggestions on Gen V's at the track.

  20. #20
    This is timely information as I was hitting 240 coolant temps on the track this weekend at High Plains Raceway. I started short shifting which helped hold and lower the temps a bit. I did take off the hood vents which I think helped a bit, but still hit 240 coolant on one of my sessions. Started hitting those temps about 15 minutes into a session.

  21. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Topplayer View Post
    I have seen people modify the grill and it helped a lot, The plastic grill adds a lot of restriction to the flow up front. Also removing the hood vents help. Keep an eye on the Rad hose if it is collapsing it could be causing problems too!

    Best ideas if you want to keep the Arrow
    the plastic grille also has another HD plastic grill behind it haha for the support. I dont know if removing the grill will do much. Its more of a aero cover for the bumper underneath. I do have to try removing the

    Quote Originally Posted by ViperGeorge View Post
    I had done back to back testing at the track on my TA 2.0. With the Arrow controller and with the stock controller. Same day, same ambient temps. I noticed NO difference in temps. Dick Winkles said he did not believe the controller would contribute much to the heat issue. He did suggest going with a higher pressure radiator cap which I have done on my ACR-E. On the ACR I rarely see 220 coolant on track. You should insulate the cooling lines that go to the oil cooler as well, they are close to exhaust manifolds and any heat they absorb goes to the oil cooler which can heat the oil which in turns heats the coolant. I would also insulate the wiring harness going to the fuse box. At those temps things can start to get melty.
    Agree with everything you suggested for upgrades. I definitely need to do that on my car to keep everything insulated and cooler. I was surprised I was running so hot. Will be doing headers soon so I will take the opportunity to do it right. Dick also suggested that to me as well, the high pressure rad cap. I was just concerned about the factory radiator being a crimped design instead of all aluminum. I didnt want that rupturing on me.

    Are people upgrading to high pressure caps regularly in their vipers?

    Quote Originally Posted by Arizona Vipers View Post
    If you're running full sessions, mostly in 2nd gear and are pushing the car hard it's going to overheat like this. Tracks where you are in 3rd more than 2nd you won't have this problem at all. I solved it, but had to remove my air conditioning condenser and have a 160 thermostat and fans come on at 160 as well. The problem is your sitting on grid at 210 coolant, so your first lap you are already 50* higher than I am. Towards the end of a full session I'm about 250 coolant, 260 oil. If I wasn't running the 160 thermo and fans, I'd hit that much sooner in the session and have to pull off. I'm pretty sure you can send your PCM to Prefix and have them turn the fans on sooner and run the 160* thermostat, you'll be 50 degrees ahead of the game on your first lap.
    Interesting, so you are just manipulating the system to give you cooling sooner so you can run the full session. For some reason I think cars should be able to run indefinitely with enough cooling for hours like in the endurance races. I thought that was why road coarse guys loved NAs. AZ you did this on the stock motor before your engine build?

    Quote Originally Posted by LuvSpeed View Post
    This is timely information as I was hitting 240 coolant temps on the track this weekend at High Plains Raceway. I started short shifting which helped hold and lower the temps a bit. I did take off the hood vents which I think helped a bit, but still hit 240 coolant on one of my sessions. Started hitting those temps about 15 minutes into a session.
    Yeah, when I had my fastest session, I hit 280F/250F on coolant at the end. I feel like the car isnt pulling anything back and just continuing to heat up.

    Quote Originally Posted by txA&M08 View Post
    I had headers and Arrow PCM installed, went to the track in 90 degree ambient (in Houston), and immediately saw much higher temps. Highest I read was 265 oil and 245 coolant, or thereabouts. The car felt like it was making about 350 hp at that temperature. It sounds like the Arrow PCM is one of the main culprits, but I like it too much on the street to take it off, so I will probably run through all the other suggestions first, short of hacking my grille out.
    I am concerned that I didnt slow down enough to notice when running hot. That scares me. And yes, I am about to get headers and totally excited about the Arrow's sounds. Don't have enough videos to experience vicariously, so there is still excitement!

  22. #22
    The other thing that I am considering is changing my coolant mixture from 50-50 antifreeze-water to 25-75 antifreeze-water. Makes sense to me since water tranfers heat better. The concern that I have is a lower boiling point for the mixture. Will have to look at some table about how much this will change. Pressurized radiator cap will help raise the boiling point though.

  23. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by ViperGeorge View Post
    Some suggestions. Blast radiator with water from inside out to make sure it is not clogged with debris and grass, Add Water Weter.
    If you spend much time on track, your heat exchangers will fill with grass, seeds, bug bodies, coarse sand and tire rubber - killing thermal efficiency. I pull the radiator about every other year, blow it out with both air and water, then repeatedly drop it flat on the floor from about 1" height. All kinds of interesting things rattle out...
    Attached Images Attached Images

  24. #24
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    I can overheat my viper on track in 3 laps by winding the shit out of the car in 2nd and 3rd gear when it's 80+ degrees.

    I'm used to tracking my TT5 S2000 and always in the upper rpm range because honda, I forget and drive the Viper in the same fashion.

    I think most people over heat the viper due to driver input and outside ambient temps more then mechanical issues.

    Since I had a nice flashing light at 240 for coolant when romping in it, i can now taper coolant temps by changing up driving style.

  25. #25
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    Are you still running antifreeze or just straight H20? Any water wetter in your system? Take your valve cover off?


 
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