ATXKJ wrote:
stoutdog wrote:
Long story short, I don't need a fuel cooler.
you might want to think about that some more - check locations nursecosmo is Wisconsin, you're in Tempe
I suspect a 90 would be a hot day in Wi and cool in Tempe -
I had friends in Phoenix when the airport shutdown because airplanes are only rated to 120
compressing the fuel for the injectors heats it significantly - when the outside air is over 100 long steel lines are not cooling it that much -
you're really depending on the fuel in the tank to absorb the heat.
and the smaller Tranny coolers are fairly cheap - designing a good install is the hard part.
I've only lived here a couple of years. Tennessee before that and frequent trips to visit family in Texas. Tennessee gets up to 100 and over and has a lot of steep grades. Texas speaks for itself.
Fuel does not compress and thus does not heat up by compression. Nor do our injector lines run under the valve covers like in the Duramaxes and fuel does not run through fuel galleys within the head like in Powerstrokes, both of which benefit from return line coolers in some situations. The only place where heat is picked up (apart from ambient heat under the hood), is from the very brief contact with the injectors(the fuel pump is cooled by the fuel). I suppose that there are situations where extra cooling would be of benefit, but under normal conditions it isn't nesesary.