Part TWO
By Tim Wright
Understanding the Lubrication Needs of SHOs.
Part 2 - Paths & Flow Designs
Below is an illustration of the V8 SHO lubrication system from the 97 Helms. It is
actually rather simple.

The oil pump pickup (5) is submersed in the oil pan sump. The pickup has a mesh screen to
protect the pump from the largest chunks of debris just in case a piece of piston skirt
could chip off or some other semi-catastrophe. The (7) positive displacement internal gear
"G pump" in the V6 is capable of 12.1 GPM at 6400 engine rpm and the V8 pump is
of similar design and rating.
The oil pump is located at front of the engine, which is the passenger side of the car.
The center of the pump is driven off of the crankshaft snout. Oil pressure in excess of 55
psi opens the (6) relief valve preventing damage to the up-stream oil filter. Cold oil or
high viscosity oil can dump out here, a good reasons to avoid heavy motor oils or
stressing engines when cold because oil that never gets to the bearings can not protect
them in any way.
Before the oil gets to the filter it passes through the heat exchanger or (3) engine oil
cooler. Both oil and engine coolant pass through this shared canister bringing them closer
to the same temperature. Because it is a fluid to fluid heat exchanger as opposed to a
liquid to air radiator it is very compact and efficient. All engines depend on oil as a
coolant to some degree, the SHO much more than most, except perhaps for air-cooled
engines. Oil to coolant heat exchangers are most unusual on production street cars and
evidence the importance of keeping the viscosity light to maximize the quantity of heat
removed by oil. Oil works best over a narrow temperature range of 220 F to 260 F degrees.
Above 285 F conventional motor oil oxidizes and begins to turn to varnish. Below 220 F oil
is still too cool and too thick to provide optimal lubrication. The heat exchanger keeps
the engine oil in the narrow optimal temperature range.
Next
in line is the screw on (4) oil filter. The annular ring of the cylindrical
filter receives the "dirty" oil and under pressure infiltrates to
the core which is the "clean" side of the filter. When excessive
pressure exists across the filter medium a bypass valve opens permitting
dirty oil to by-pass the filter medium preventing oil starvation at the
bearings. Some oil filters have the by pass on top near the inlet (as
illustrated), other designs have the by pass on the far end of the element
or the bottom.
This design does not meet Ford standards for three reasons. With dirt and
metal chips collecting on the far end of the filter if the by pass valve is located down
there it will be swept up when the bypass valve immediately above it opens. Oil coming
from the engine washes over the dirty side of the filter media when the bottom by pass
valve is open. A top bypass oil filter passes unfiltered oil to the engine but a bottom
bypass filter washes dirt off the filter add it to the dirt load in the unfiltered oil and
hits the bearings with a much greater amount of debris - at least in theory! The last
strike against bottom bypass filters is the problem with ice. In theory, the dome end of
the oil filter should be the lowest point of the lubrication system and it work as a place
to collect excess moisture and water. If water was in the bottom of the filter and froze
it could either obstruct or freeze the bypass valve closed. The PureOne by Purolator has a
bottom bypass valve, but the Motorcraft, made my Purolator for Ford has a top bypass
valve. I don't want to get in Dutch with either design camp and will try to get some
balancing information from Purolator and Amsoil.
Pennzoil Technical Information
June, 1999
F-01-A
Over-Pressurized Lube Oil Filters
Normal oil pressure (30 to 60 psi) causes no deformation of the oil filter body.
However, when pressure exceeds 150 psi, due to failure of the engines oil pressure
regulating valve, most filters become permanently deformed.
Pressure exceeding 150 psi may also be sufficient to blow out the gasket and/or unroll
the lock seam causing the filter body to break loose from the base plate. The main point
to remember is that the oil filter is not the cause of this excessive pressure, but the
victim of a faulty oil pressure regulating valve, usually located in the engine oil pump
assembly.
On the back of this page is a copy of a Technical Service Bulletin issued by the
Automotive Filter Manufacturers Council (TSB-83-1). When approached by a customer who
wants to file a claim for engine damage as a result of this problem, attempt to explain
what happened by using this bulletin. You should be able to satisfy owners complaint
immediately.
In those incidences where you cannot satisfy the owner, it is imperative to complete a
"Claim Investigation Report" in detail and submit the oil filter for laboratory
analysis. Contact your regional manager of technical services if you need assistance
submitting a filter claim.
To keep your Technical Manual current file in Section F: Filter Applications. This
bulletin supersedes Technical Information Bulletin F-01 which should be removed and
discarded.
Mike Maddox
National Manager
Technical Services
Oil by-pass occurs when the engine and oil are cold, or when the viscosity
is too high, or when the filter medium is loaded up and can not filter oil as quickly as
it is being feed. The important point we will return to latter is the difficult job of
filtering out sub 10 micron size dirt particles while maintaining a flow of many GPM of
oil. Even when the oil and engine are warm achieving this using any device no bigger than
a coke can in next to impossible because the filtering area just does not fit in shell
that small. If we knew when the bypass valve was open we may take it easy longer when the
engine was cold. Depending on the filter it may also be true that we are in full bypass
mode anytime the engine is running over 3000 rpm and the secondaries are open - even with
a warm motor and clean oil! Some filter designers trade flow capacity for the ability to
clean the smallest dirt and have bypass valves that open at lower pressure. Others make
the opposite trade off, they flow higher quantity and don't clean as well on one pass, may
have higher opening setting for the bypass valve and rely on their multiple pass
efficiency to filter out all the dirt. In the small space provided it is impossible to
make a single filter that flows 12 GPM and cleans 100% of the oil down to the smallest
size. It is possible using premium filter medium and clever design to do an acceptable job
but we will come back to that later. Some race cars avoid this problem by running two very
large truck size oil filters in parallel. You can too if you don't mind moving the
battery. They good news is you may not have to. In race cars the goal is to contain all
debris if the engine has a sudden major failure. With most street engines we need only
keep up with dirt and minor engine wear.
The SAE "Life and Efficiency" standards require oil filter shells to be capable
of withstanding 200 psi of pressure. Why when the pump only generates 55 psi? When the oil
is cold it is very difficult to filter. Sub SHO quality oil filters can do many strange
things in use. They sometimes explode or rupture. Recent offshore manufactured AC Delco
PF35L oil filters have a reputation for that. They also implode - the pressure
differential can collapse the center tubes into a crushed shape like a submarine at the
bottom of the sea. Once damaged on the inside the element can detach on the inside so you
have an empty shell doing nothing with the element bouncing around inside the can like a
baby rattle. The high pressure turbulence of hot incoming oil will knock it around inside
the shell like a tennis ball and it may further self-destruct. Pennzoil and to a lesser
extent Quaker State have PDF files on their web sites "diagnosing" bad engine
relief valves for batch of oil filters with collapsed guts and ruptured cans. I guess they
don't have internal bypass valves that work or their typical buyer uses thicker weight oil
in their motors. They say their filters are OK to 150 PSI, normal pressure is 30-60 PSI,
why not 200 PSI as required by SAE tests? In time the heat cycling a filter endures can
enbrittle the paper media which can deteriorate like a wet newspaper in a hurricane
littering the engine with little bits of paper on bearings surfaces, cam lobes oil
galleries and blocking off the oil pick up screen starving the oil pump. Running high
viscosity motor oil increases the pressure difference; making filter damage that much more
likely but why risk a bargain filter when the combination is a recipe for problems?
With every stroke an engine inhales some small amount of dirt that is too small to be
trapped by the air filter. A larger amount of oil filtering media can pass more oil at
lower pressure than a smaller area of the same quality. But just as important it can also
store more dirt. As pores in the media plug up other pores come into play until all the
pores are plugged up and the oil must use the bypass valve and the oil filter should be
replaced. Instead of thinking of cleaning efficiency one can also think of filters as
"3000 mile" trash cans and when or if the trash can is full the trash overflow
will bypass as unfiltered and eats engine bearings and cam lobes. A filter with more
square inches of filter media not only flows more oil at a lower pressure but also has a
proportionally higher capacity to hold dirt - which buys running time. If you are behind a
soot belching municipal bus or filthy dirt covered construction truck and the airborne
particulates inhaled by your engine may momentarily increase 100,000 fold it is a great
thing to have a disposable place to be rid of dust and carbon soot.

One common design combination known not to work is thin shell, cardboard end caps, a small
amount of high efficiency filtering media and heavy viscosity cold oil. The cold thick oil
can not pass the filter so the thin can bulges or explodes and the guts of the filter may
be crushed. Every time we change oil we pour in 6 quarts of stone cold oil and jazz the
pedal we play Russian Roulette with our bearings. Many cheap filters "let it
rip" while they are still on the lift, - at the dealership.
Before oil leaves the filter, a one-way anti drain back valve keeps dirty oil from
returning toward the engine from the filter when the engine is shut down. This can not
happen on the V8 SHO because of its vertical mounting but it does on the V6. Oil leaving
the filter passes through the (3) heat exchanger a second time and this is where the oil
pressure send unit is located.

Once the oil is back in the block Ford does an interesting thing. All exits are in
parallel, not in series. Almost all of the oil can either head to the main bearings or cam
bearings but not both. It is like a controlled leakage situation with all the paths short
and each path quantity exactingly controlled by clearances. If it routes to the cam
bearings it lubricates and cools those bearings and the (1) Timing Chain Sprocket
Tensioner then splashes the valve shims and drips home. Oil sent to the main crankshaft
bearings lubricates them then travels to the rod bearings via holes drilled in the
"cross drilled" crankshaft. After the rod bearings the oil travels the length of
the connecting rod and lubricates the wrist pin and finally returns to the oil pan via the
oil control grooves in the piston. Did I almost forget to mention, a small bit of oil is
also sent to the (8) Front Chain Tensioner?
A subtle game is at play here balancing the clearances of the diverse paths to balance oil
flow. If for example, one were to replace the factory pistons with ones that have a lose
fit, more of the oil would take the easy path to the detriment of oil flow to the cam
bearings. The factory system is very reliable if we just do our part, use quality oil and
oil filters.
One final thought:
Oil coolers are not radiators; they are oil to air heat exchangers.
In order to function they must be supplied with large amounts of the coolest air possible.
This means ducting and it means that oil coolers should not be mounted in the exit ducts
from the water radiators-no matter how convenient it may be. One last word-in cases where
the designer fell off his drafting stool and has provided a totally inadequate water
cooling system, it may be possible to drag the water temperature down by super cooling
with oil. - "Prepare to Win" Carroll Smith, Aero Publishers 1975.
Now in this context Mr. Carroll Smith is talking about oil coolers that look like
radiators not fluid to fluid heat exchangers like the SHO has. With the exchanger the oil
and coolant will tend toward the same temperature. But when is the oil heating and when is
it oil cooling the coolant? One would need an oil temperature and a coolant temperature
gage to know for sure. I would like to know! I think oil would achieve operating
temperature first, heating the coolant and speeding up the process of engine warm up. If
the radiator is sized large enough the coolant should tend toward the same temperature or
a little warmer than the thermostat setting. Is the coolant ever warmer than engine oil? I
don't think so. I am again speculating that creating water jackets in the SHO heads close
to those double exhaust valves with good flow is no simple task when the same area is at a
premium for the double exhaust port passages. A problem further compounded by the high
specific engine output and compact design of the engine. I suspect the plan here was that
the high quantity of oil bathing the heads washes away heat from hot spots the engine
coolant does not have the best access to. Just another reason to be very particular about
oil, oil filters, and maintenance intervals with a SHO. Knowing what I do about the Yamaha
engineering I doubt anyone fell off his drafting stool. I doubt they still have drafting
stools to fall off of. But ol' Carroll is right about one thing "it may be possible
to drag the water temperature down by super cooling with oil."
You mentioned in one of the parts about the relationship between water and oil temp. I
have digital gauges in the race car with 1F calibrated sensors, one in the coolant
manifold, the oil temp sensor is located in the main galley above the crankshaft, right
above the passage going down to the rear main bearing. (This sensor is only accessible
when the flywheel is off...) Once the engine is warmed up, oil and water temps track
within a few degrees for light driving and highway cruise. Only when loading is high does
the oil temp exceed the water. On the track, I see 220F coolant and 230 to 240F oil temps.
At cold start, the water also warms faster than the oil, I see the coolant temp start to
rise from ambient within 5 seconds of cold starting the engine, were-as the oil lags by
several minutes during the warm-up phase.
There is also a rather ingenious bypass valve in the core of the oil/water heat exchanger.
Its not thermostatic, but is viscosity based; If the oil is viscous (cold...), it will
bypass the cooler and go straight to the engine. It's a simple spring-loaded plunger that
opens and allows oil to bypass the cooler. Don't know if this gadget is on the V8 oil
cooler, but it is on the V6. The V6 routes the oil through the filter, then through the
cooler. This may also help protect the cooler from overpressure spikes seen at cold
startup. - Gary Morrell
This is interesting in that on cold start the oil cooler may actually work as an oil
preheater and aid engine warm up, minimize start up engine wear and perhaps effect
start-up emissions.
Rambling Oil Filter thoughts.
LOWERS ENGINE TEMPERATURE OFTEN 20°F OR MORE
The Airwolf Remote Oil Filter System and its hardware are a natural conductor of heat.
That is why we affectionately call it the "poor man's oil cooler". A properly
installed Airwolf Remote Oil Filter System with ample air circulation can help reduce your
engine oil temperature significantly. (from Airwolf web site)
This is an indication of the ability of an air stream over a remote filter system to
remove heat. Fluid to fluid coolers can be 1000 times more effective than air to fluid
radiators because of the density of fluid and latent heat caring capacity per weight. I
think we can assume that the SHO oil cooler can remove a LOT of heat from the oil. Maybe
in an airplane a remote filter may remove a lot of heat but I suspect the cooling ability
of a remote filter under the hood of a car to be subtle, nothing like 20°F
On magnets, note that SHO engines also have little to no ferrous metal in their
construction. The block of the V6 is iron but the V8 is all aluminum - heads and block.
What do you think of these "super
magnets" that attach to the outside of the oil filter?
First of all you have to realize, that there is very little ferrous metal in an
aircraft engine. However if you wanted to collect what little there is, it really is not
very efficient trying to accomplish it at the oil filter location The oil is typically
traveling at over 7 gpm as it goes through the oil filter. These Neodymium
" super
magnets" as they are commonly called, are really not so super or strong enough to
pull this ferrous metal out of suspension as it whizzes by at 7 gpm. It just isn't
possible. In addition, most people don't realize that Neodymium
magnets loose their
magnetic properties the higher the temperature gets, where at 200°F they have but 10% of
the magnetic forces left. Guess what your engine operates at. 185°F. If you really wanted
to put a magnet into your system, the ideal place would be the bottom of your drain plug.
This way what little metal you may have suspended in your oil, is allowed to slowly fall
out of suspension to the bottom of your oil pan, where it slowly migrates over to the
lowest point in your sump, where it could be collected by a simple magnet. Just like
automobile engines have done for years.
But then Glen came through with this helpful note. It seems even an all
aluminum engine will make a little iron.
Tim and all,
There's enough iron in the engine to make a drain plug magnet worthwhile IMHO. Cam gears,
timing chain, cams, valve train, rods, crank, etc. Admittedly, some are non wearing. I
pulled the cam position sensor once and it was covered with tiny iron particles.
Glen Murdock
97 Pacific Green
The issue may be less one of iron than design, it is very difficult to
attract and hold sub 20 micron iron particles from a oil stream as it rushes by. Someone
else told me that Super magnets don't lose their force at high temperatures, but the
important point is that to be effective at all they have to work at an area where the oil
will be still for a long time, like the bottom of a sump.
Most folks pre-fill an oil filter and always run a oily finger along the gasket but
Airwolf recommends grease for this purpose.
How tight should I tighten my filter to make
sure it doesn't leak, but is still easy to remove?
The single biggest mistake people make when installing an oil filter is failing to
use a dab of Dow Corning DC4 or any good silicon grease on the oil filter O-Ring before
screwing on the filter base. Never use engine oil on the gasket as 50 hrs later when you
try to remove the filter, the oil will have been long gone and the filter will not want to
come off. We purposely have made our oil filter adapter easily removable with 4 bolts, so
if you put the filter on like a gorilla, or you used engine oil as a lube, you can take
the filter base off the aircraft and put it in a vise and deal with it there. Never try to
remove a stuck filter on the firewall, as our mount is deceptively simple, yet very
strong, and you have the potential of pealing back the firewall with brute force. We
purposely did not provide a way of holding our filter base with a large wrench because if
would provide you with a very large lever and increase to potential of damaging the
firewall. Again, fix the problem, not the symptom. Use a dab of DC4 silicon grease and
you'll never have a problem removing an oil filter.
One last Airwolf gem on oil temperature:
What is your definition of a "High"
oil temperature?
On our website, we now have a new link that addresses this very subject, and
specific things to look for. The first thing we do at Airwolf, is try to determine from
the customer, what their definition "High Oil Temps" is. When we hear temps of
240-250°F, we get very, very concerned. I have been told that in Lycoming's service
school, they tell the class that there is a temperature reading that you never, ever want
to see on your gauge. Their comment is "AT 265°F, YOU HAVE TWO MINUTES TO LIVE"
The temperature your read at your temperature gauge is actually 50°F lower that what the
engine is seeing in the sump of the engine. Therefore at 315°F [265°F+50°F], you have
no lubricity left in the oil. All you have is a liquid and engine seizure will occur..
Remember this the next time you climb out on a very hot day and your engine oil temps are
at or very near the redline of your old non specific colored oil temp gauge. Now you see
what it is really important to calibrate your temperature gauge.
I thought the +50° comment interesting, Gary Morrell reports 240° peak
oil temporaries on the track so add 50° and we have almost 300° and a lot of reason to
commit to synthetic oil for their heat resistance.
I think synthetic motor oil is
essential for SHO motors that will see sustained high speed or sustained high RPM. The
most recent tri-synthetic Mobil 1 is supposed to "protect your engine" (whatever
that means) up to 400°F. Under extreme conditions the engine coolant alone can not keep
up with the heat a healthy SHO engine can generate and the oil cooling system becomes far
more important, and I just don't think conventional motor oil is up to the job for many
enthusiastic drivers. Just as many SHO owners don't need Z rated tires every day they
provide a margin of safety just encase a need presents itself, so too with synthetic motor
oil.
Mercon ATF is stable up to 368°F but Mobil 1 ATF is stable up to 430° F which is a huge
60° safety margin. In spite of the ATX problems the Mobil 1 ATF showed only 2.2%
oxidation and I credit it for saving my transmission.
Go to Part Three: Understanding the
lubrication needs of the SHO (Oil Filters)
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