I looked online for a stock Pantera radiator and couldn't find many options that I found affordable and made sense to me. I checked out having one made - but that wasn't economically feasible. I really wanted to just find a radiator option from a readily available car in production now.
I did a lot of looking but didn't find anything that would fit my car. Then one day my son said, "Have you tried looking at a radiator from a Toyota MR2?" I know, I know this car is so much more under-powered when compared to a Pantera with a Coyote engine, but what the heck, let's take a look.
I got online and found that the radiator was exactly the size I wanted (15" wide by 30" tall). I found a new, two-row aluminum radiator for a whopping $135. To top it off, the twin electric fan with shroud cost only $185. Less than $500 and the cooling was looking good.
Will it work and keep the old girl cool? We will have to wait to see. I did get a radiator that was for the turbo version of the MR2 - hopefully that will be all I need. Here's a shot of the radiator I bought and the p/n of the electric fan that I am using.
I decided that I wanted to lay the radiator down as flat as possible to let the cooling fans have plenty of room to pull air through the radiator. I saw this done on several Panteras and was told this gives more cooling ability especially when vents are added to the hood - a project I will take on later.
I had to do a little surgery to the brackets on in the front where the radiator resides so that it would lay down like I wanted it to. Here's a before and after shot of the space in question. In the second picture you can see how the brackets were modified.
I made a set of brackets that would would allow the radiator to lay carefully in place at the angle I needed for it to be set in the car. Here's a shot of what the radiator looks like laying in place.
I then secured the radiator in place with two side brackets. Now it is securely in place. Here's a shot of the mounted radiator.
With the radiator securely in place it was time to plumb it up. I decided to use flexible stainless steel tubing to hook the radiator to the tubing under the car running to the engine. Here's a shot of the kits I used (2 total @ approx $30 each).
As you can see the inlet and outlet are in the upper corners of the radiator. I needed to turn the inlet and outlet in a quick 90 degree down to hook the radiator to the stainless steel pipes I placed under the car running to the engine. I went to the auto parts store and found a radiator hose that is 1.25" x 1.5" dia with a 90 degree turn. With a little trimming this fit perfectly. Here's a shot of the part numbers of the two parts I bought (one from two different parts stores).
It all went into place quite simply. Here's some shots of the finished product.
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteI want to ask if the experiment work
I have trouble with my fluidyne radiator after 9 montha of use.
Thanks
Andy
Can’t answer completely yet. Still not on the road yet so I can’t tell if it will cool in traffic. Seems to work at idle. I haven’t run it for long periods - just long enough to get the engine to temp. Still a ways from being drivable. Sorry no definitive answers yet.
ReplyDelete