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Any advice on how to incorporate a Lockhart oil-thermostat in the cooler lines ?

Started by fjaap, December 20, 2012, 04:32:11 PM

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fjaap

Hi all,
one of the things that I still have on my list is to incorporate a Lockhart Oil-thermostat

(that I have since the late 80's) into the oilcoolerlines.

Because all 4 pipes on the thermostat are more or less flared, I guess it is meant to be connected by means of opening up the braided rubber part of the lines and ensure a tight
fit by means of hose clamps.
I'd rather do it by means of fittings, because I don't trust the forementioned method.
Concrete question: has any of you ever built-in such a thermostat ? If so, how ?

Thanks in advance,

Jaap

SlowOldGuy

Jaap.
Any way you do it, the fittings on the thermostat are designed for hose clamps.

You could build a set of custom lines with proper fittings to attach to the oil cooler and the oil pan.  Randy offers such fittings at RPM.  However, the oil cooler pump is a low pressure curculation pump so you should be able to use hose clamps without leaking.

I don't know about splicing the thermostat into the stock lines, but it "should" work as long as the lines are kept off of the exhaust pipes.

I ran an aftermarket Lockhart oil cooler on an '82 XJ1100 and it used rubber hoses and hose clamps without any problems.

DavidR.

Pat Conlon

....or you could buy a RPM oil cooler which has a built in thermostat.....

....along with better cooling the summer!  It's a very nice product.
1) Free Owners Manual download: https://tinyurl.com/fmsz7hk9
2) Don't store your FJ with E10 fuel https://tinyurl.com/3cjrfct5
3) Replace your old stock rubber brake lines.
4) Important items for the '84-87 FJ's:
Safety wire: https://tinyurl.com/99zp8ufh
Fuel line: https://tinyurl.com/bdff9bf3

SlowOldGuy

That was going to be my first suggestion, but he said he already had the thermostat.

DavidR.

Alf

All summers I ride on Europe with my friend JC, another FJ owner. We have been discussing about the Randy cooler with the thermostat included.
We both like our bikes for the simplicity: There are only a few things that you can break in the middle of nowhere, in Croatia or Portugal or a lost village in mainland Spain or Switzerland, most probably levers in any stupid crash, like 4 years ago. A set of spare levers that carried with us and a little of gaffa tape avoided to get the travel interrupted

If you have a thermostat is another thing that could break. Are we correct?

ribbert

Quote from: Alf on December 21, 2012, 01:57:37 AM
All summers I ride on Europe with my friend JC, another FJ owner. We have been discussing about the Randy cooler with the thermostat included.
We both like our bikes for the simplicity: There are only a few things that you can break in the middle of nowhere, in Croatia or Portugal or a lost village in mainland Spain or Switzerland, most probably levers in any stupid crash, like 4 years ago. A set of spare levers that carried with us and a little of gaffa tape avoided to get the travel interrupted

If you have a thermostat is another thing that could break. Are we correct?

No, you are not correct.  A thermostat is a simple device.  I can think of 20 things more likely to leave you stranded in a remote location than that, even on a "simple" bike like the FJ.
I "broke" an engine from chronic overheating, a perfectly good motor with only 40,000 k's. It needed a rebore and new pistons. If only I'd had a better oil cooler with a thermostat, hmmm.
Also everything in your engine is happier if you can narrow the temperature operating range.
Nobody removes the thermostat from their car before a trip in case it fails on route.
Noel
"Tell a wise man something he doesn't know and he'll thank you, tell a fool something he doesn't know and he'll abuse you"

Alf

The car example is not good, I think. Nobody removes the thermostat in a water cooled vehicle because on cold temperature the engine wear is excessive
And in fact I prefer to travel with an oil/air cooled engine because if the head gasket go you only have a oil split. In a water cooled vehicle you break the complete engine... and your hollyday travel sink... in my case at more than 3.000 kms from my island
I have fitted a big oil cooler. In fact a thermostat would be nice, because my FJ take a long time to get the correct operating temperature even in Tenerife, but with bigger tolerances than a water cooled engine, it is only feel in a little oil consumption in a daily use. And I know that it comes from that, because all day of fast riding there is no oil spent

I will speak with Randy about the technical issues... but I´m afraid about it, because I´m sure he is going to convince me to fit it


ribbert

Quote from: Alf on December 21, 2012, 07:39:18 AM

And in fact I prefer to travel with an oil/air cooled engine because if the head gasket go you only have a oil split. In a water cooled vehicle you break the complete engine...

Alf, what is it with you worrying about everything breaking. How often do you hear about catastrophic head gasket failure on a modern engine these days.

Noel
"Tell a wise man something he doesn't know and he'll thank you, tell a fool something he doesn't know and he'll abuse you"

Alf

Mmmmmm Good question. A friend of mine who works in a road assistance service says me than he is all day transporting BMW bikes because of electronic faults

andyb

A thermostat can most definitely break.  Specifically at any of the multiple junctions that were added to install the kit.  That's mitigated by the fact that everything got a once-over when you install it, yes?

I've done a head gasket in a air cooled bike as well as a water cooled bike.  The only difference was that one could be done in the frame and one could not, and that has little to do with engine design and more to do with frame design.

Realistically the most dangerous thing to break when you're out playing on the road?  Traction, at the wrong time. 

Back to the main subject, I grasp what a thermostat does and the function.  I just cannot fathom a good rationale for putting one in an oil line.  If the swing between the viscosity of cold oil and warm oil is that great to cause such trouble, you're using the wrong oil for the circumstances, and I don't want to ride where it goes from that cold to that hot quickly.  :)   A thermostat in the oil cooling system isn't going to let the bike run cooler, because you're not going to dissapate any extra heat.  In theory it'll let it get to temp faster, which is not a bad thing, but being gentle with a cold motor often translates to being gentle on cold tires (nevermind on cold reflexes, so to speak) and that's a good thing.


Alf

I agree with you, andyb. Being gently with the gas until my oil gauge indicate 80º I think is enough

The only time in more than 500.000 Kms in my FJs that I´ve been recovered by a road assistance service was last September when I broke my pull throttle cable at 50 kms from home only. And I realized that in our travels we take sparks, wd40, hand & feet levers, oil filters, bulbs and even a clutch slave cylinder repair kit, but no throttle cables  :dash2: :dash2:

SlowOldGuy

I know "some" people who tie wrap an extra pull cable onto the old cable just in case.

DavidR.

ribbert

Quote from: andyb on December 21, 2012, 11:35:41 AM

   A thermostat in the oil cooling system isn't going to let the bike run cooler, because you're not going to dissapate any extra heat. 



The idea of a thermostat in the oil cooling system IS to let the engine run cooler in that you can run a much larger / efficient cooler and only tap into 100% of its capacity when needed in extreme conditions.
Not quite as important but quicker oil warm up is also a good thing.  Oil takes a lot longer to warm up than the rest of the engine.  

Yes thermostats can break, so can every other thing on the bike, but it's about probability.

I once had a Suzuki 750 bought new and it broke down in a very remote location with only 22,500 miles on it. I determined the ignition unit was the problem, it had power but no spark. I transported the bike and garaged it at the nearest town and made my way home, 1000km's away. A week later, armed with a complete ignition unit, I returned by train. I removed the side cover, undid the screws the holding the unit in and as I removed it the last inch of the crankshaft fell on the ground! It had a casting flaw in it. Having only enough money on me for fuel and a bit of food and being pre credit card days, getting myself and the bike home was quite a saga.

However, I did not determine from that point on to always carry a spare crankshaft with me on every subsequent bike I owned.

It's about probability and weighing up the advantages versus the risk.

The fact that we even ride bikes makes us higher than average risk takers in itself.

I like my fully loaded car with all its toys and gizmos, yes, more to go wrong, but the added driving pleasure outweighs the unlikely event of an oscillating air vent failure.

Noel
"Tell a wise man something he doesn't know and he'll thank you, tell a fool something he doesn't know and he'll abuse you"

andyb

Quote from: ribbert on December 21, 2012, 05:43:52 PM
The idea of a thermostat in the oil cooling system IS to let the engine run cooler in that you can run a much larger / efficient cooler and only tap into 100% of its capacity when needed in extreme conditions.
Not quite as important but quicker oil warm up is also a good thing.  Oil takes a lot longer to warm up than the rest of the engine.  

The thermostat does not add any appreciable cooling.  That's the job of the cooler, so installing a thermostat alone isn't going to do much that's useful.

The oil takes a good five minutes of use to get to temp, just like tires do.  I stand by my assessment that you should just be easy on the motor until the tires are warm.  It really only makes sense to me if you park the bike overnight atop a mountain where it's quite cold, and then ride down into a hot desert, and a bigger cooler would be time better spent than a thermostat for the oil.


As for installing throttle cables side by side and only connecting one... that's a fairly normal thing for dirtbikers, I thought?  Also clutch cables, where applicable.  On the FJ's push/pull setup, you should be able to just swap half of the push cable for the broken one and carry on, assuming you've got the tools and started with all four cables when you set off.

Alf

As for installing throttle cables side by side... in my 1100 I covered 170.000 kms without any cable broken and in my actual 1200 the throttle cable has resisted 190.000 kms (less quality than the OE one?  :rofl2: ) and 23 years

A bit superfluous, I think