Sky Render
Stig's Retarded Cousin
I'm sure most of the guys doing road course track days are running an oil cooler, but what about autocross? Should I invest in the BOSS 302's oil cooler?
The runs are to short for it to matter, but if you have money burning a hole in your pocket...go for it.
- A bit of extra weightSo other than possible leaking or the extra oil - there really isn't a downside to adding an oil cooler?
The 3v 4.6L engines have an oil cooler from the factory (oil to coolant exchanger). No need for an additional oil to air exchanger until you are way up in HP and doing extended road course sessions in the heat.
And, 4.6L 3V's (in the mustang) don't have an oil cooler. Modular 4V's do, but that's it, not the 3V's.
Maybe the oil temperature comes up more quickly than it would in the absence of such a heat exchanger, but the coolant sure takes its own sweet time showing any progress on the gauge.You can thank that nice, efficient little heat exchanger that is an integral part of the oil filter mount on the block. It also brings the oil up to temp quicker in cold weather.
NormFactory Shop Manual said:
- With the vehicle in NEUTRAL, position it on a hoist. For additional information, refer to Section 100-02 .
- Drain the engine cooling system. For additional information, refer to Section 303-03A .
- Drain the engine oil.
I think the simple answer everyone is missing is....you need an oil cooler when your oil is getting too hot. Get a gauge and see what's actually going on versus asking a bunch of guys on the internet to help you speculate; you might be trying to address an issue that doesn't exist.
I used a sandwich adapter on my '08, that's probably the easiest, but there might be some other way to do it on the 5.0 that I am unaware of.
There are a number of sources but Glowshift is pretty popular (and extremely cheap).