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Meade asked about this in another thread so I thought I would start one over here for him.  I used a DeRale 16-pass cooler with integral fan, which I wrapped with 1/2" spacing, wire cloth:

cooler & screen

It was then dry-fitted in the Driver's rear wheel well.  The mounting bracket spaces it up off of the mounting surface enough so that it does not need any holes in the mounting surface for air.  I mounted an external spin-on (Ford style) oil filter to the frame member just behind the cooler so everything is easily accessible.  If you're careful about placement of the filter (and exhaust) then you can easily pop the valve covers off to check valve lash without removing anything major:

Cooler and filter locations

The cooler has a fan thermostat switch on the cooler's output to turn the fan on when the oil temp there goes above 180º F.  The oil hoses are all stainless Braid protected because of the proximity to the exhaust pipes.  This was done years ago and I had a spare Fram filter kicking around for mock-up.  I wouldn't recommend them for our engines.  A Wix/NAPA Gold 1515 does a better job.  I have also added a thermostatic oil routing switch (a Mocal Sandwich plate) between the oil filter and mount since these photos were taken, and that handles quick warm-up duties and only runs the cooler when needed (over 180º F):

Cooler and Hoses

This is the empty space in the wheel well before the cooler was mounted.  Plenty of room, and no interference with the wheel/tire in 15 years.

Cooler Location

This is the DeRale cooler before installation.  I forget the dimensions precisely, but IIRC it was about 13" X 16" and about 3" from surface to top of fan.  Comes with AN-8 fittings mounted (1/2").  Setrab fan-assist coolers are pretty similar but are sold (I believe) as 96-row, meaning that there are 96 rows of aluminum fins on the pipes for cooling.  It also comes with the mounting brackets installed (gives about 3/4" clearance off the mounting surface) and the fan can pull or push, depending on wiring polarity (mine pulls).  

Derale Cooler

It has been very effective and trouble free since 2004 when I installed it.  Took about a day, but you also have to figure in the time for hose fabrication at a jobber's shop, so the whole thing might eat up a week.  I found a guy who could work with a flow diagram, coat-hanger wire bent to the angles I needed for each hose and directions to orient the end fittings.  He gave me the hoses and fittings separate to dry-fit so I could mark orientation, then I returned to his shop to have him assemble fittings to hoses - everything fit perfectly when assembled to the car.

Good Luck!

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I do like that you can fill the filter with oil before spinning it on.  Seem if you stay on maintained roads - it wouldn't be issue.  There are really nice alloy covers for filters should the madness strike.  This one fits full size filters and is a reasonable $25. (Ha the one labled Offy is $6 more than the same looking one for $20.  http://www.speedwaymotors.com/...-Aluminum,25554.html

http://www.speedwaymotors.com/...ter-Covers,5724.html

Image result for oil filter cover

Last edited by WOLFGANG

"that oil filter is vulnerable to road debris especially behind the rear wheel."

Actually, it's not.  The photo may not show it well, but the filter sits about 12" inboard of the wheel, and just slightly inboard of the body frame.  Plus, it has been in there since 2004 without even a scratch on the paint, through paved roads, dirt roads, tracks with track bunnies, you name it.

I'm not gonna worry about it.  I'm just gonna drive it.

"Halakahiki Bill" wrote in reference to my cooler photo: "No wire grommet to the t-stat?"

Nope, not through the fiberglass.  There are matching cable clamps on both sides of the fiberglass, and the 2-lead lamp cord goes through both, and each has a rubber keeper to provide both strain relief/retention and protection for the lamp cord.   If you look closely in Photo @#2 you'll see the black rubber, inside of the cable clamp, holding the 2-wire in place.  No threat of the fiberglass abrading the 2-wire as it passes through the panel as it has a (minuscule) service loop.  The alternative was a big, honkin, Pass-thru-collar that I thought was overkill.  Mil-Spec?  No.  Gordon-Spec?  Absolutely.

Besides, I didn't have a big, honkin, Pass-thru-collar in my goodies kit that night.  

Last edited by Gordon Nichols

     I should have updated. I removed the Empi cooler from the VS location and made a couple of brackets to mount the Setrab cool pack in the same location but tilted out at the top 45 degrees. This way I could reuse the original mounting bolts. I also wired the fan as a puller to suck the heat from the cooler and blow it out the bottom of the car.  Then I installed a 190 fan switch, I figured with the 180 oil t’stat it would let the oil start running thru the cooler and cool down and if it got to 190 after the t’stat opened then the fan would turn on.

    Anyhow it seems to work great. Now the fan almost never turns on and it runs about 1/4 to 3/8 up from the bottom on the gauge even on hot days. I don’t know if my design is working or the Setrab just works that much better.  I was too lazy to move it to the fenderwell so I thought I would try this first it allowed me to keep all the old oil lines and the VS mounting bolts.  I’m also using a 3.44 gear so the cooling fan is not turning as fast and it still runs cooler.  I ran it for about 20 miles one day about 75 mph on an 80 degree day and it still kept cool so I don’t worry about oil temp any more.

Last edited by Fpcopo VS
Fpcopo VS posted:

     I should have updated. I removed the Empi cooler from the VS location and made a couple of brackets to mount the Setrab cool pack in the same location but tilted out at the top 45 degrees. This way I could reuse the original mounting bolts. I also wired the fan as a puller to suck the heat from the cooler and blow it out the bottom of the car.  Then I installed a 190 fan switch, I figured with the 180 oil t’stat it would let the oil start running thru the cooler and cool down and if it got to 190 after the t’stat opened then the fan would turn on.

    Anyhow it seems to work great. Now the fan almost never turns on and it runs about 1/4 to 3/8 up from the bottom on the gauge even on hot days. I don’t know if my design is working or the Setrab just works that much better.  I was too lazy to move it to the fenderwell so I thought I would try this first it allowed me to keep all the old oil lines and the VS mounting bolts.  I’m also using a 3.44 gear so the cooling fan is not turning as fast and it still runs cooler.  I ran it for about 20 miles one day about 75 mph on an 80 degree day and it still kept cool so I don’t worry about oil temp any more.

The Setrab is a better product/design. Is the VS location for the cooler on the front (transaxle) side of of the firewall? I like your idea of using a 190° fan switch, as well as spacing it out from the wall at the top. Any pics? How does it do after an hour or 2 at 75mph? What 4th gear are you running with the 3.44? What size engine is in your car? Al

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