My OE radiator runs my car super cool at Sebring. Fellow E46ers with CSFs seem to always get really hot when ambient temps are mid 80s and hotter. Can you swap an OE rad in just to make sure?
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Help diagnosing high water temps at track - Resolved? (not really!)
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Originally posted by Obioban View Post
Shouldn’t matter with a healthy stock cooling system and good tune.
It would be helpful to know the baseline problem temperature to understand it in context. Temps in FL right now shouldn't be all that high.
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Hey all sorry for the late response, work has been hectic and havent been able to check back here. Im going to try and respond to everyone's points as well as I can!
Obioban You and the others could be onto something about the TTFS tune... but since I got the car tuned, I've done 2 track days (Homestead and PBIR), 1 drag strip night with 4 passes, and 1 autox with it before these last two track days that I had high water temp. I cant say for certain if my water temps were dead center during those previous events, but def not like what happened in late November that made me make this thread. Unfortunately I dont have a stock tune to flash back to, my car came with the ancient AA tune from the previous owner, and the tune I had before the custom TTFS was Buildjournal's B-Spec...
I also posted the dyno graph, to show the AFRs, its a photo of the monitor so kinda grainy.
enjoy_m3 Yup did the bleed with ignition on 2 and heater running at max heat. Bled multiple times, with the front of the car raised, bleeder screw open, heater running, for at least 10 minutes. No bubbles whatsoever. And yes I actually do have underdrive pulleys, car came with AA power pulleys, but again these have been on the car my entire ownership. And yeah on M3Cutters is where I saw all the scary blown HG stuff lol. When i saw how thin the HG material between the bores was I was convinced that mightve been my issue, but alas solid compression!
I'm thinking as due diligence to have the entire cooling system looked over, especially water pump, thermostat, and if theres any clogs or blockages.
thegenius46m Yup i mentioned in my earlier post I did a full coolant flush, including the block drain plug. 1L BMW coolant, 1 bottle of RL water wetter, and the rest distilled water. My math isnt great but I assume that's at least 80/20, maybe closer 90/10? The CSF rad also came on the car from previous owner, so has been on the car my entire ownership. I can check when he bought it? It was around 2016 IIRC, is that within the time frame of those that had defects/issues?
Estoril Hmm i thought I had mentioned in my OP, but yeah the major running hot track day was this past November, on a fairly cool by SFL standard day and had rained earlier and was cloudy so ambient temps were good. Def not the hottest day at the track for the car. The early Feb most recent track day was also rainy but nothing crazy warm, maybe low 80s max. I tracked the car a couple summers ago in June and didnt see the water temp issue im seeing now (but may have been before the TTFS tune...)
Last edited by BigRussia; 03-08-2021, 12:54 PM.
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Do you happen to have a datalogger? I haven't had a chance to sit down and sift through some old sessions but my oil temps are running higher on the CSF cooler. This may sound dumb but the first thing that I would check are your underdrive pulley's and t-stat. Someone here may be able to correct me but a sticking t-stat will not throw any codes. I went through hell bleeding, re-bleeding, bleeding, x20 when I did a cooling system refresh (with a high quality aftermarket radiator) and ended up having to vacuum bleed the system (should have done it the first time) to get all the air out. You can get to the t-stat in minutes (considering you are running an e-fan) so that is a quick, but messy check. Boil it.
I wish I had more data on aftermarket parts vs. the OE parts so I could impart some advice but people with way more experience with this car swear by the cooling efficiency of the stock system, so I would defer to them.
I am in a similar situation as you are with respect to A/C. I am in NC and the car is driven to the track and back, so deleting the A/C is not worth the weight savings on a 92 degree day with %80 humidity, unless you want to go to a full cooling solution or die.2006 ///M3 6MT Coupe Jet Black Track Car
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Originally posted by Fresh1179 View PostDo you happen to have a datalogger? I haven't had a chance to sit down and sift through some old sessions but my oil temps are running higher on the CSF cooler. This may sound dumb but the first thing that I would check are your underdrive pulley's and t-stat. Someone here may be able to correct me but a sticking t-stat will not throw any codes. I went through hell bleeding, re-bleeding, bleeding, x20 when I did a cooling system refresh (with a high quality aftermarket radiator) and ended up having to vacuum bleed the system (should have done it the first time) to get all the air out. You can get to the t-stat in minutes (considering you are running an e-fan) so that is a quick, but messy check. Boil it.
I wish I had more data on aftermarket parts vs. the OE parts so I could impart some advice but people with way more experience with this car swear by the cooling efficiency of the stock system, so I would defer to them.
I am in a similar situation as you are with respect to A/C. I am in NC and the car is driven to the track and back, so deleting the A/C is not worth the weight savings on a 92 degree day with %80 humidity, unless you want to go to a full cooling solution or die.
I hope someone can chime in as well about the sticking t-stat not throwing a code, cause Im still leaning that might be my issue.. but yeah again no codes at all anytime I check for faults!
Agree on the A/C, Im in SFL and doing anything that comprises the cooling power of my A/C is a non starter for me haha
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Is this a track car only? If so, you can gut the thermostat. Most of us did that on our SCCA cars, or just take it out entirely. I haven't looked at how the M3 thermostat is integrated so it may not be possible.
The other thing is on the tune, a lean condition makes the car run hotter. Check around for leaks past whatever air metering you have, or if the tune disabled knock sensors so it could run leaner that would be a problem too. I would suspect something other than the radiator with it being limited to higher RPMs. Could be fueling too if it's a lean condition causing the problem.
Stock water pump? High rpms can cause cavitation on an incorrectly designed impeller.Last edited by tnord; 03-12-2021, 09:13 AM.
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Originally posted by tnord View PostIs this a track car only? If so, you can gut the thermostat. Most of us did that on our SCCA cars, or just take it out entirely. I haven't looked at how the M3 thermostat is integrated so it may not be possible.
The other thing is on the tune, a lean condition makes the car run hotter. Check around for leaks past whatever air metering you have, or if the tune disabled knock sensors so it could run leaner that would be a problem too. I would suspect something other than the radiator.
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I don't know that much about how the DME works in this application, but on my old race car we had to run HUGE radiators that you might find on like a full ton diesel truck. Reason being the stock computer would pull timing very aggressively at temps above like 205. No idea if that's a feature built into the BMW DME, but if it was disabled that's another pathway to running hotter than normal.
A restriction in the radiator is a restriction in the radiator and it would still be a problem at 6k rpm or 8k rpm. Same with the thermostat, but I'd still gut that thing on a track-only car just to remove the failure point.
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Originally posted by Obioban View Post
The one on track engine failure TTFS (custom dyne) tune I have seen had the knock values turned way down, despite the owner requesting a safety over power tune-- and detonation was what led to his engine failure.
OP just grab a stock tune from here and flash it on: https://github.com/saildot4k/MSS54-X...20-%20Partials
Make sure to grab the exact same version than what's on your car or you might brick your DME.2002 Topasblau M3 - Coupe - 6MT - Karbonius CSL Airbox - MSS54HP Conversion - Kassel MAP - SSV1 - HJS - PCS Tune - Beisan - MK60 Swap - ZCP Rack - Nogaros - AutoSolutions - 996 Brembos - Slon - CMP - VinceBar - Koni - Eibach - BlueBus - Journal
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Originally posted by tnord View Postyou can gut the thermostat. Most of us did that on our SCCA cars, or just take it out entirely. I haven't looked at how the M3 thermostat is integrated so it may not be possible.
I agree, remove it and see if the temperature drop to normal or lower.
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Originally posted by tnord View PostI don't know that much about how the DME works in this application, but on my old race car we had to run HUGE radiators that you might find on like a full ton diesel truck. Reason being the stock computer would pull timing very aggressively at temps above like 205. No idea if that's a feature built into the BMW DME, but if it was disabled that's another pathway to running hotter than normal.
A restriction in the radiator is a restriction in the radiator and it would still be a problem at 6k rpm or 8k rpm. Same with the thermostat, but I'd still gut that thing on a track-only car just to remove the failure point.
Gutting the thermostat isn't really possible, but if you were to remove it, then the coolant would just flow (mostly) from the engine into the water pump and back into the motor which would quickly cause an overheating situation.
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