What Cools the Radiator

Tuesday, March 25, 2014 | Labels: , , , | | What Cools the Radiator?

Radiators are heat exchangers, meaning that it is their job to take heat from some location and move it somewhere else. The radiators heat comes from the engine, but in order for the radiator to do its job, that heat has to be transferred somewhere.

Heat Exchanger Basics

    Where cars are concerned, heat exchangers come in four basic varieties: water-to-air (such as the radiator), air-to-water (some types of intercoolers) and air-to-air (other types of intercoolers). Heat exchangers work by temperature differential: Heat from the substance to be cooled migrates to the cooling medium -- air, in the case of a radiator -- as long as the cooling medium doesnt get saturated by the heat.

Radiator Cooling

    If air remains stagnant around the radiator, itll quickly heat up and match the temperature of the fluid inside. This is why radiators need a constant flow of air, either by a fan at low vehicle speeds or by natural air pressure coming in through the grille at highway speeds. Low outside temperatures and high barometric pressures (greater air density) can increase that radiators cooling capacity; high outside temperatures and low pressure (as at high altitude) can reduce the radiators ability to cool the engine.

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