Just for completeness:
I got a somewhat-brief response from Sonex today. Basically I was told that I
can run a lower viscosity oil, but they have no suggestions/recommendations on what to put in. They also recommended I put in a mechanical oil pressure gauge to cross-check the VDO sender (the VDO sender I bought from them. The one which maxes out at only 80 psi, so you can't truly tell if you're seeing excessive oil pressure). They also noted that I can run without an oil cooler in cold temps (but no comment on what temp range might be recommended for that mode of operation, or how I would go about modding the AeroVee to do this). They also recommended I idle the engine until the oil temp is above 80 degrees (which, of course, is exactly what I was trying to do when the oil cooler blew out).
:-/
Not being incredibly impressed with the depth of information I'm working with, I also read a bunch and posted on some VW forums. Many VW automotive solutions & standards are inappropriate for an aircraft applications. However, I wanted to see what they had to say and then make my own judgments based on my experience so far with the AeroVee and with automotive (racing) engines that I worked on in my youth. I got some great responses and some pretty useless responses (hey, its the internet). The two notable things I took away are -
(a) 20w-50 is claimed to be "too heavy" by many VW folks and has been known to blow out oil coolers. This is due to a combination of the stock oil galley size around the oil pressure relief plunger (which tries to bypass the oil through bearings and other narrow orifices), the heavier-than-stock oil-pressure-relief springs that come in modern VW kits, and the thick cold oil itself. AeroConversions undoubtedly has a reason why they want a thick oil in the engine (either to maintain high pressures with hot oil at high RPM, or to retain a thick oil film when the engine is not used for weeks at a time, or for some other reason). However I had my ear chewed off about how 20w-50 is excessive and unnecessary in an automotive application.
(b) Early VW oil pumps were smaller than modern pumps and the bigger aftermarket pumps people use now often require (or are heavily encouraged to use) oil pump covers with special pressure-relief passages, or remote bypass valves that are daisy-chained to remote oil filters. I find this info germane since the AeroVee Turbo seems to be using something similar to
this CB Performance pump and I believe that pump flows more than the old 26mm stock unit.
So, here's my current plan:
(Note that I don't claim to know that these are the correct steps to take; just putting it on-record as what I am going to try)- Clean everything with Simple Green Aircraft Cleaner
- Get a replacement oil cooler
- Switch to Brad Penn 15w-40 oil (still semi-synthetic with high ZDDP). VW automotive guys are encouraging me to switch to 10w-30 but I want to make incremental changes and not suddenly find myself dealing with low oil pressure when the engine is hot.
- Replace the 80 psi VDO sender from AeroConversions with a 120psi or 150psi VDO sender. I might lose a little bit of precision, but doing this will allow me to see if the engine is running up to excessive pressure levels on engine-start without having to run an oil line into the cockpit and set up a mechanical gauge.
- Pull the oil control and oil pressure relief plungers out and check the bores for signs that the springs are scraping or not moving freely. I don't think this is an issue but I want to check to be sure. I tested the plungers themselves before assembling the engine and they slid smoothly and freely so I know they're OK.
- Optional Bonus Fun - I'm really not a fan of the hard-line for oil that runs from the pressure sender to the crankcase flywheel flange. I'm going to look at converting that to a -4 AN braided hose and using an cushioned (Adel) clamp on the oil cooler attachment bolt to hold the hose in the proper orientation/shape (so it has a high point for oil to drain back, and so its own weight doesn't apply a torque on the fittings to loosen up over time).
--Noel