DaveBonds
Garage Trash
I've been playing around with some rudamentary ideas to bump the warm up cycle in the Scamp for some time.
Along with the upper half of the engine being rebuilt, I'm swapping over to a clutch fan and setting up a heat stove, but one of my friends who works at a Toyota dealership got me thinking about building a vacuum insulated thermos that holds a reasonable amount of antifreeze.
He was telling me that the Prius uses a vacuum thermos reservoir somewhere in the front fender to help with engine temperature regulation on the hybrid combustion engine. I guess those engines have trouble staying warm, because they are not always in use and wear out prematurely.
The idea is that a vacuum insulated reservoir holds it's temperature after driving, for hours after the engine has lost all of it's running temp, so it helps the engine raise back into the running temp range, much quicker than just a thermostat.
I'm thinking that this system's insulating barrier could be self charged with the aid of a one way vacuum valve, fed from the manifold and given how much room is under the hood on the passenger side of the engine, could hold quite a bit of coolant and keep it at engine temp for a long time. I'm thinking overnight, even. I know that small vacuum thermos cups can keep coffee warm all day in the cold.
If this works for a hybrid engine, I don't see why it couldn't work on any car. It would do the same thing as an oil heater, only it would use the wasted energy from the engine temp and isolate it for later use.
I know that modern cars have a lot of one way vacuum valves in them, but I'd like to run a test on some components before building a system like this. It wouldn't need constant vacuum. It would only use vacuum from the engine to recharge the insulation barrier, similar to how an oil accumulator works.
Hell, for that matter, I could even utilize a 2nd reservoir for oil accumulation to keep the oil warm if it works well.
Does anybody know of an aftermarket outfit that makes anything like this?
Along with the upper half of the engine being rebuilt, I'm swapping over to a clutch fan and setting up a heat stove, but one of my friends who works at a Toyota dealership got me thinking about building a vacuum insulated thermos that holds a reasonable amount of antifreeze.
He was telling me that the Prius uses a vacuum thermos reservoir somewhere in the front fender to help with engine temperature regulation on the hybrid combustion engine. I guess those engines have trouble staying warm, because they are not always in use and wear out prematurely.
The idea is that a vacuum insulated reservoir holds it's temperature after driving, for hours after the engine has lost all of it's running temp, so it helps the engine raise back into the running temp range, much quicker than just a thermostat.
I'm thinking that this system's insulating barrier could be self charged with the aid of a one way vacuum valve, fed from the manifold and given how much room is under the hood on the passenger side of the engine, could hold quite a bit of coolant and keep it at engine temp for a long time. I'm thinking overnight, even. I know that small vacuum thermos cups can keep coffee warm all day in the cold.
If this works for a hybrid engine, I don't see why it couldn't work on any car. It would do the same thing as an oil heater, only it would use the wasted energy from the engine temp and isolate it for later use.
I know that modern cars have a lot of one way vacuum valves in them, but I'd like to run a test on some components before building a system like this. It wouldn't need constant vacuum. It would only use vacuum from the engine to recharge the insulation barrier, similar to how an oil accumulator works.
Hell, for that matter, I could even utilize a 2nd reservoir for oil accumulation to keep the oil warm if it works well.
Does anybody know of an aftermarket outfit that makes anything like this?















