My quoted temperatures for Japanese areas are extremes & I stand by them.
When designing any product, you have to consider the extremes of the environment in which it is going to operate & then factor in a safety margin.
The Great Pretender wrote:-
Ambient average temperature in Japan (max summer min winter)
Sendia 27.9/-2.0
Tokyo 30.8/2.1
Nagasaki 31.3/3.6
Source Japan meteorological agency.
So 31 to -2, sounds very similar to what we have.
I agree with these temperatures, but you can not compare average values of one climate with the semi-extremes of another climate & then put them forward as a comparison in a discussion.
In the U.K. Braemar has the coldest recorded temperature & Faversham has the hottest.
They are Braemar -27.2*C & Faversham +38.5*C
The ambient average air temperatures are (max summer, min winter)
Braemar +9.8/+2.7
Faversham +14.7/+6.5
Source London meteorological office
From these values we can see that the extreme temperature values are similar (quoted in a previous post), but the overall average ambient air temperatures are a lot milder in the U.K. (cooler in the summer, warmer in the winter)
The Great Pretender wrote:-
Now I know the Bongo is a wonder but what sensor does the coolant system use to monitor air temp and how does it open the thermostat to allow full flow?
The Bongo doesn't have such a sensor & neither does any other vehicle (as far as I know), cooling of an engine & therefore the coolant flow around a system relies on a law of physics called Conduction. I'll try to explain briefly & in simple layman terms, some of which I have talked about before.
A hot liquid (+40*C Japan extreme high ambient air temp)can not absorb as much heat as a cooler one(-30*C Japan cold air temp).
Therefore a greater amount of hot liquid is required, than a cold liquid to acheive the same cooling effect.
In a closed system where the volume of liquid is fixed, this greater requirement of liquid results in a faster flow of coolant to the engine block from the bottom of the radiator. This faster flow from the radiator is equalled by the flow from the engine to the radiator & therefore a faster flow through the radiator itself, as the radiator transfers coolant heat to the high ambient air temp.
The thermostat in the engine maintains an operating temperature.
If the engine temperature is slightly above the operating temp. it opens very slightly & allows coolant to pass.If the coolant temp. (inside the engine block) then falls (due to a low ambient air temp. creating -30*C coolant to re-enter the engine from the radiator) then the thermostat will close again resulting in a low/slow flow of coolant through the radiator.
If on the other hand, the engine temp. rises due to hotter coolant entering the engine block from the radiator due to a high ambient air temp.(+40*C), then the thermostat will open wider/further making a larger orifice thus allowing a high/ faster flow of coolant to pass.This larger coolant flow travels through the radiator tubes & the coolant heat is then tranferred to the higher ambient air temperature(+40*C), before returning into the engine block.
Fitting a smaller radiator to your Bongo would result in a faster/greater coolant flow through it, but it may also result in the Bongo being under cooled on a hot day ( as not enough excess engine coolant heat can be transferred to the atmosphere, before the coolant has to re-enter the engine block to absorb more excess internal engine heat). This is going to ultimately result in the Bongo engine overheating & the coolant being ejected from the system under pressure as the coolant boils around the cylinder head.
This senario can be duplicated by placing a piece of cardboard in front of the radiator, reducing the area of the radiator fins for the air to flow through & therefore having less area to transfer the excess coolant heat to the atmosphere. I suspect the Bongo will overheat given time on a hot day!
Your subject heading is "Design Fault" & started with the question below.
Why does the rad flow top to bottom as most of the time it isn't doing that?
I believe the radiator is the correct design. Coolant flows through it in an effective manner & the large area of tubes/fins allows the coolant heat to be transferred to the ambient air temperature efficiently.
I believe that the speed/ re-direction of coolant flow in a radiator does not/ will not prevent sediment build up. It will merely move the sediment somewhere else & cause other problems to occur.
I believe that the real "Design Fault" was that Mazda & most other vehicle manufacturers do not incorporate coolant filtration on their engines to remove particles that occur during a vehicles lifetime.
I believe the largest cause of coolant particles/sediment is mainly due to poor maintenance/human error & not manufacturer design.
I think I have now tried to explain why Mazda may have designed the radiator that's on the Bongo, (why a larger radiator is required in hotter climates).
What different engine components do & how they work together to achieve engine cooling.
What I feel is the real "Design Fault" and suggested ways how "Joe public" may be able to remedy issues that have developed on older vehicles that they have not necessarily owned from new.
Nigel
_________________