Drago86
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I was looking at some picture of the Nismo undertray online and it brought up some interesting questions.
1. Why is there a version with tiny cut outs for the oil cooler and on without any cutouts.
2. How does the coil cooler function at all with no cut-outs or such small cutouts on the Nismo.
At first I thought that the air flowed through the cooler and then along the under tray under the aluminum support and exhaused out the back like the normal cooler stack, but once I saw pictures of the other side of the undertray, and that it is sealed with foam tot he "dead end" area just like the normal Z is sealed to the vent area.
See photos below:
Bottom of undertray NO CUTOUT version:
Top side showing sealed oil cooler area with no flow through the cooler possible:
Close up of the two part numbers on the GR0A version, so they planned a version with holes and one with out to exist simultaneously, it's built into the mold. Why? Who gets the version with holes and who gets the version without?:
Here is a photo of the version with holes, the are literally the width of e pencil, there cant be much flow. and again why? who gests the version with holes?
To my best knowledge these were both off North American Nismo's.
I realize that the Nismo prioritizes downforce, and dumping the oil cooler output below the nose is detrimental to downforce, but at the cost of oil cooling? Is this really the best solution they could com up with? Fully or 97% blocking the oil cooler flow?
Who gets the version with the tiny extra cooling holes? Was this sold in hotter states? We could have owners report where the purchased, model year and if they have the holes or not to find out....
Am I missing something here? Does the Nismo have a hidden oil to water heat exchanger hiding somewhere to make this okish? I know it had the extra intercooler heat exchanger int he passenger side wheel well and the extra engine coolant radiator int he drivers side, but neither of those directly impact engine oil temps. How does the Nismo cool it's oil on track when the cooler is blocked??
1. Why is there a version with tiny cut outs for the oil cooler and on without any cutouts.
2. How does the coil cooler function at all with no cut-outs or such small cutouts on the Nismo.
At first I thought that the air flowed through the cooler and then along the under tray under the aluminum support and exhaused out the back like the normal cooler stack, but once I saw pictures of the other side of the undertray, and that it is sealed with foam tot he "dead end" area just like the normal Z is sealed to the vent area.
See photos below:
Bottom of undertray NO CUTOUT version:
Top side showing sealed oil cooler area with no flow through the cooler possible:
Close up of the two part numbers on the GR0A version, so they planned a version with holes and one with out to exist simultaneously, it's built into the mold. Why? Who gets the version with holes and who gets the version without?:
Here is a photo of the version with holes, the are literally the width of e pencil, there cant be much flow. and again why? who gests the version with holes?
To my best knowledge these were both off North American Nismo's.
I realize that the Nismo prioritizes downforce, and dumping the oil cooler output below the nose is detrimental to downforce, but at the cost of oil cooling? Is this really the best solution they could com up with? Fully or 97% blocking the oil cooler flow?
Who gets the version with the tiny extra cooling holes? Was this sold in hotter states? We could have owners report where the purchased, model year and if they have the holes or not to find out....
Am I missing something here? Does the Nismo have a hidden oil to water heat exchanger hiding somewhere to make this okish? I know it had the extra intercooler heat exchanger int he passenger side wheel well and the extra engine coolant radiator int he drivers side, but neither of those directly impact engine oil temps. How does the Nismo cool it's oil on track when the cooler is blocked??