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Old 03-14-2011, 07:57 PM   #6 (permalink)
chops
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Originally Posted by SPOHN View Post
Well it's obvious the cooler cools the oil. But to my understanding the thermostatic sandwhich plate gets the oil up to and reaches an ideal operating temperature by allowing more or less oil to flow accordingly to warm up faster. But I don't think it does what your referring to. I'll let another shine in.

Plus I have a big cooler (which I need) which it cools so well along with being more oil it can't bring temps up to a certain level even with the thermostatic sandwhich plate in colder weather. Being that coolers cool so well it's not going to keep the temps at a perfect set degree even with the thermostatic sandwhich plate. Especially in colder climates. Lots of threads here on both of these issues. This is the best I can explain.
interesting...i only ask because when i was doing some research into oil coolers i remember reading about thermostatic sandwich plates. essentially, they have a thermostat, and when it reaches a certain temperature, the valve will open and allow oil to start flowing to the cooler, and when the oil is too cold, it will shut. thus eliminating the need for a plate to block off the cooler.
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