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2026-04-13
1.Engine Cylinder Scuffing or Bearing Seizure
Excessive temperature causes the piston and cylinder wall to over-expand. This disrupts the lubricating oil film and leads to piston-cylinder seizure (scuffing) or adhesion between the bearing shell and crankshaft (spun bearing symptoms). Such conditions are a primary cause of catastrophic engine failure.
2.Cylinder Head Gasket Failure
Localized overheating deforms and cracks the cylinder head gasket. This results in coolant mixing with oil or combustion gas leakage. Typical blown head gasket symptoms include significant power loss and white exhaust smoke.
3.Engine Oil Degradation and Thermal Breakdown
High temperatures accelerate engine oil oxidation and viscosity thinning, compromising the lubrication system. This exacerbates internal friction and may lead to severe bearing burnout.
4.Engine Knock and Reduced Fuel Economy
Elevated intake air temperature promotes premature detonation, inducing engine knocking (pre-ignition). This damages pistons and connecting rods while causing a noticeable drop in engine power output and an increase in fuel consumption.
5.Accelerated Component Aging and Under-Hood Heat Soak
Rubber coolant hoses, seals, and wiring harnesses harden and crack under high thermal stress. This significantly increases the risk of coolant leaks and potential vehicle fires.
Improvement measures for insufficient radiator heat dissipation typically focus on enhancing cooling efficiency and optimizing airflow/coolant circulation. The following section presents a detailed radiator performance upgrade case study.
A 1.5T SUV engine triggered a coolant temperature warning during sustained high-load hill climbing. The OEM radiator core measured 600×400×16 mm and utilized a single-row configuration with φ7 mm tubes.
Thermal balance calculations revealed that the stock radiator had an insufficient heat dissipation margin—only 8%, whereas a safety margin of 15–20% is mandatory. Additionally, excessive clearance (15 mm) between the fan shroud and the fan allowed approximately 30% of the airflow to bypass the core (airflow recirculation). The frontal air velocity at the radiator surface measured merely 3.5 m/s.
(1) High-Performance Radiator Core Design Optimization
Solution: While maintaining external radiator mounting dimensions, the tube arrangement was upgraded to a dual-row radiator core with φ7 mm tubes. The fin density was increased (fin pitch decreased from 4 mm to 3 mm). This high-efficiency radiator core modification increased the heat transfer area by approximately 40% and enhanced air turbulence for superior heat exchange.
Effect: Cooling capacity increased by approximately 25%.
(2) Radiator Fan Upgrade and Airflow Management
Solution: The electric cooling fan motor power was upgraded from 150 W to 250 W, raising radiator CFM (airflow) from 1,800 m³/h to 2,500 m³/h. The fan shroud clearance was simultaneously tightened from 15 mm to 8 mm to reduce air leakage.
Effect: Low-speed cooling efficiency improved by an additional 15%, meeting radiator requirements for most climates. For extreme heat operation, a further upgrade to a Brushless DC (BLDC) electronic fan enables intelligent PWM fan control with continuously variable speed.
(3) Airflow Guidance and Ducting for Maximum Cooling
Solution: A fully enclosed air guide duct was installed between the radiator and AC condenser to eliminate airflow short-circuiting. Additionally, turbulence vanes were added at the four corners of the core to eliminate stagnant vortex zones.
Effect: Effective frontal area utilization increased by 12%, directly addressing localized engine overheating.
(4) Coolant Passage and Material Optimization for Heat Rejection
Solution: The tube header design was changed to a multi-channel D-shaped tube, reducing coolant flow restriction by 18%. Fin material was upgraded to composite brazing aluminum with a hydrophilic coating to enhance condensate drainage and thermal conductivity.
Effect: Improved coolant flow rate and overall heat exchange efficiency.
Following implementation of the above radiator improvement measures, under identical hill climb test conditions, the engine operating temperature decreased from 112°C to 99°C—safely below the 103°C warning threshold. The coolant boiling point margin increased, and the system successfully passed a continuous 1-hour high-load endurance test.
Cost-Benefit Summary: The incremental material cost was approximately $6 USD, while overall heat dissipation performance improved by over 40%.
1.Radiator Clogging and Blockage
Internal Clogging: Suspected radiator blockage requires a professional cooling system flush.
External Clogging: Clean clogged radiator fins of debris and insects; consider installing a radiator protective mesh to prevent future airflow restriction.
2.Coolant Fluid Issues
If the coolant condition is poor due to age, mixing incompatible coolant types, or improper antifreeze concentration, perform a complete coolant flush and fill using the manufacturer-specified formula.
3.Cooling Fan Not Working
Inspect and replace faulty cooling fan relays, fan motors, or the coolant temperature sensor (ECT sensor).
4.Water Pump Failure
Replace the water pump if impeller corrosion or serpentine belt slippage is diagnosed.
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