C5 Tech Corvette Tech/Performance: LS1 Corvette Technical Info, Internal Engine, External Engine, Tech Topics, Basic Tech, Maintenance, How to Remove & Replace
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by:

Super Charged Cooling System Alert

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Apr 15, 2007 | 04:35 PM
  #1  
yellowLPEZO6's Avatar
yellowLPEZO6
Thread Starter
Instructor
 
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 145
Likes: 0
From: Lynn IN
Default Super Charged Cooling System Alert

If you own a Corvette that has had an intercooled Magnuson Supercharger system installed and you think all is well under the hood of your pride and joy, you may be in for a big surprise.

When inspecting my 2003 ZO6 Corvette after winter storage, to my surprise I found a kink in the heat exchanger return hose passenger-side connection at the base plate behind the blower drive belt at the fire wall. After a more intensive inspection of the same heat exchanger return cooling hose routing, I found a second severely kinked area where the hose makes a bend for its routing to go under the frame around to the upper barb of the heat exchanger.

This hose is molded for its 90-degree bend under the passenger side head light location for the upper barb of the heat exchanger connection, but it is not molded at the other end. With my ZO6, this hose was not wire-tied and slid down the inner fender making almost a 90 degree bend where the hose was laying on the sway bar before making its bend under the frame rail around to under the passenger side head light and through the radiator shroud.

With my ZO6, I estimated a 75% to 80% restriction in volume at the sway bar location and a 50% restriction at the passenger side connection at the engine blower base plate passenger side connection.

To correct the problem I bought a 3-foot length of 3/4 in. ID heater hose that had stainless steel coil spring that you can make any angle you need up to 90 degrees and will not allow the hose to collapse. I cut out the kinked area at the sway bar location and replaced with about a 60-degree bend with the coil spring on the outside of the hose.

I bought a piece of 3/4 OD x .065 wall .620 ID aluminum tubing from McMastercar (part no. 89965K92 at www.mcmaster.com, phone 330-995-5500) and made two 3-inch long nipples to make my hose connections. Make sure you use aluminum tubing for your nipples so they will not contaminate the 50/50 Dex-cool coolant. Use a #10 stainless steel hose clamp for your hose connections. You will also need to drop the sway bar down at the bushing locations to make room to work. Also, make sure you file and fine-sand the outside and inside ends of the cut aluminum 3-inch nipples.

At the connection of the same heat exchanger return hose at the blower base plate passenger side connection, I simply cut off about 2 inches of the kinked hose and reinstalled it. After you have replaced your restricted hose with the new heater hose section, make sure you wire-tie the hose in two or 3 locations to eliminate the possibility of the hose sliding down the inner fender and restricting the coolant flow. Be careful not to pull the wire ties too tight as to restrict flow rate.

After speaking with a Corvette Tech at Magnuson Products, he told me that you most need 100% of the cooling capacity when the outside air temp is above 75 degrees for the coolest intercooler temp for maximum horsepower gain.

The bottom line is . . . don't assume that the cooling system for your supercharger is flowing at 100%. Check every inch of your hose routing for kinks and restrictions. It could be costing you a major horsepower loss, especially if the outside air temp is above 75 degrees.

Just because you have had your system professionally installed doesn't mean that your cooling system routing has no restriction problems. It could be costing you a significant horsepower loss.

Last edited by yellowLPEZO6; Apr 15, 2007 at 05:53 PM.
Reply




All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:11 PM.

story-0
Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

Slideshow: How to Protect A Convertible Top: 10 DOs & DON'Ts

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-03 00:00:00


VIEW MORE
story-1
Top 10 Most Explosive Corvettes Ever Made: Power-to-Weight Ratio Ranked!

Slideshow: The 10 most explosive Corvettes ever built based on power-to-weight ratio.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-20 07:23:03


VIEW MORE
story-2
150 hp to 1,250 hp: Every Corvette Generation Compared by the Specs That Matter

Slideshow: From C1 to C8 we compare every Corvette generation by the numbers.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-12 16:54:12


VIEW MORE
story-3
8 Coolest Corvette Pace Cars (and Replicas) of All Time

Slideshow: Some Corvette pace cars became collectible legends, while others perfectly captured the look and attitude of their era.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-11 09:50:51


VIEW MORE
story-4
Top 10 Corvette Engines RANKED by Peak Torque (70+ Years of Muscle!)

Slideshow: Ranking the top 10 Corvette engines by torque output.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-05 11:58:09


VIEW MORE
story-5
Corvette ZR1X Will Be Pacing the Indy 500, And Could Probably Race, Too!

Slideshow: A Corvette pace car nearly matching IndyCar speeds sounds exaggerated, until you look at the numbers.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-04 20:03:36


VIEW MORE
story-6
Top 10 Corvettes Coming to Mecum Indy 2026!

Among a rather large group of them.

By Brett Foote | 2026-05-04 13:56:44


VIEW MORE
story-7
Top 10 C9 Corvette MUST-HAVES to Fix These C8 Generation Flaws!

Slideshow: the top 10 things Corvette owners want in the C9 Corvette

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-30 12:41:15


VIEW MORE
story-8
10 Revolutionary 'Corvette Firsts' Most People Don't Know

Slideshow: 10 Important Corvette 'firsts' that every fan should know.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-04-29 17:02:16


VIEW MORE
story-9
5 Reasons to Upgrade to an LS6-Powered Corvette; 5 Reasons to Stay LT2

Slideshow: Should you buy a 2020-2026 Corvette or wait for 2027?

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-22 10:08:58


VIEW MORE