GregO
Well-Known Member
Let’s think this over a bit.Yep, except I have an fittings lmao
Did you order rubber or braided hose ?
Did you order the 18+ single O-Ring MMR crossover ?
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Let’s think this over a bit.Yep, except I have an fittings lmao
Off the cuff and in my opinion only, I’d want a bleeder port installed at the high point of the crossover hose.It’s the braided hose with AN fittings. Runs up like that picture you showed. And the connector into the heads has 2 orings.
As I see it the engine high point coolant outlets are about the same elevation as the intake port elevation. The MMR hose high point is well above the coolant outlet ports.I'd like to have a water circulation diagram and put a T in the top then either run a hose to a pressure or suction side depending on what the water does at the rear of the heads.
That is very possible. I wonder if bending the hose or adding 90 degree fittings and tucking it under the IM would stop the air bubble and let water flow.The added tee and hose might short circuit cylinder head flow causing additional localized hot spots.
This was my thought at helping push the air out if a bleeder port isn’t installed at the hose high point.That is very possible. I wonder if bending the hose or adding 90 degree fittings and tucking it under the IM would stop the air bubble and let water flow.
As is I don't think water will do anything but sit there. I suppose a flow meter could be installed to find out.
That I don’t know.Do the factory race teams run a crossover there?
If it’s trapping air I see it creating a thermal flow disturbance at the back of the heads where the coolant fights to travel both left and right. I’m thinking along the lines the rear crossover is adding another zone to the cooling system but isn’t rejecting the heat.I still think both heads are under high pressure at the rear and water will not flow through the hose.