Re: Blown Head Gasket
Man o man... I was going to reply to this last night but the storm knocked the power out.
Let me reitterate...
Oil is the primary coolant, you guys aren't seeing the big picture. Your only seeing what the little temprature gauge on the dash is telling you.
Half the time it's wrong anyways...
Oil has 4 properties, or 4 things it needs to do in order for an engine to function.
Cool, Clean, Lubricate, and Seal In that order.
mariner1900 said:
Therefore the hottest part of any engine is the top 1/3 of the cylinder bore and the combustion chamber in the cylinder head. Both of these areas are cooled by water. No oil comes in contact with these areas.
There is 1 truth in there and everything else is false. The hottest part of an engine is the combustion chamber, and i'll give you that, but the second hottest part is the crown of the piston, the head tends to run a bit hotter than the piston crown, but not by much, and here is why. Oil cools the piston. Oil does cool that top 1/3rd of the cylinder as you put it, ever hear of an oil control ring or scraper rings? Oil coats everything just under the 2nd compression ring, and I think that covers the top 1/3rd of a cylinder wall.
If oil was not the primary coolant, pistons would contiunually expand until they siezed. Water obvisouly does not cool the pistons (unless of course you have water in your oil

) Ever take apart a diesel... What are all those oil injectors in the sump for...
To Cool, Without them the pistons would overheat. Water
does not come into direct contact to the hottest parts of a running engine, but oil does.
Who cares what the water temperature of the block is.... If the pistons are 1000F degrees instead of the 5-600F that they should be... It's going to blow up if oil doesn't cool the pistons.
Same thing goes for the bottom end of an engine, If oil didn't cool the crankshaft, the main bearings, the rod ends, their temperature would rise infinitely until everything swells and the engine stops dead. Water does not cool the bottom end of a block, oil does.
Oil also does cool the head. Sure water goes in 1 side and exits the other. But it does not swirl around the valves, or what would be the backside of the combustion chamber. Hey what cools the valves and keeps them from expanding to the point that they stick???????? Oil.
You can run an engine for a little bit without water, (or forever if it's air cooled) but you can't run it without oil. If oil had
NO cooling properties then engines wouldn't work.
So I stand by my statement... Oil is the primary coolant, in
any engine.
Water would be a secondary coolant, as some engines by design do not require water.
Then air, the outside ambiant temperature, would be the 3rd coolant. If it is very cold then air cools very well, if it is very hot out then the temperature differental is less and air doesn't cool as effectively. If you put a motor in a box and the box didn't vent it's concievable for an engine to "easy bake oven" itself to death.
Heat has to radiate somewhere... and it starts with the oil
And i'm not saying that water in the oil caused the head gasket to pop, I only said that having water in the oil, even for a little bit, causes all sorts of gremlins.
Don't bother repairing the head until you tear apart the lower. 10 bucks says the overlay on the main bearing are wiped out.