wlarson861 wrote: I have not completely closed off the bottom opening but others have with mixed results. Some have had adequate oil temps, others had high oil temps. I put the grill I made on last summer and the oil temps went up, that is only about a 50% reduction to the opening. I took it off and haven't put it back on. I may see what it does in cooler weather but not now with the oats going up(finally).
If you have the oil temp probe in the bottom of the sump (in place of the oil drain plug) it gets cooled by the air coming through that lower opening. Closing off the lower opening doesn't really change the oil temperature in the engine. It just changes the temp that the probe is reporting. Yes, cooling the probe itself will change the temp readout. So you can expect to have higher
indicated oil temp with the lower opening closed off. But that doesn't really mean that the engine is running that much hotter.
If you move the oil temp probe to the location we use on the turbo engines, you'll find that the temp doesn't change that much by opening or closing the lower cowl opening. It may change a little, but it won't be drastic.
As a side note on the "probe-cooling" issue, take a look at Piper Super Cubs and other Piper aircraft of that era. People complained about high oil temps on the early Super Cubs and other similar models, so Piper started installing a blast tube the blew cold air directly on the probe. They didn't change anything else, but they quit getting complaints of high oil temp!