Hi Ray,
I read your article and it has some good information in it. I am especially interested in this air flow barrier that you installed under your car frame.
After messing around with heat problems in my Healey for the last three years, I have done some of the things you mentioned. I have also tried some things based on the advice from other members of this forum. I have determined by my observations that there is more than one " heat transfer " problem/symptom in our cars that needs to be addressed.
I have addressed the worst of these symptoms.
I added an unpressurized overflow tank along with the napa radiator cap so it would pull the coolant back in to the radiator after the car cools off while I was putting the car back together starting 5 years ago now. I had remembered it spitting out coolant back in the early 70s when my Dad let me drive it a few times so I didn't wait to see that happen again.
1.. The operating temp of the car was way over the rating of the thermostat. This was most noticeable on hot days 95 F and above. It would indicate 210 F or more after a spirited ride or cruising on the interstate. It would never loose any coolant so I was originally just trying to lower the summertime operating temperature. For this symptom, I tried the correct thermostat as you did, that helped a very little but not enough to matter. Next I tried a Norman Nock fan from BCS.
That seemed to help more than the correct thermostat but even combined with the correct thermostat did not " fix " this symptom. The problem was just slowed down a little. The last thing I did really fixed this one heat symptom. I went to a couple of local old radiator shops and asked what could be done to the radiator. Both shops took one look at the original Healey radiator and said " so they used a forklift/ industrial radiator core in these cars ? " The one shop said they had done many LBC radiator core conversions using my original upper and lower radiator tanks with a new modern high efficiency core as other forum members have said they did. I had this done and that absolutely fixed this symptom.
The car will always run a few degrees above the thermostat rating even on the hottest days of summer, no matter which thermostat I am using. But this was true ONLY when driving down the road.
2... When at a stoplight when the outside temps were above
90 F, the longer I sat at a stop light, the higher the engine temp would climb and at the same time, my car's idle would get lower and lower and eventually it would cut off. When I restarted it, it would run rough and backfire before moving. I figured that the heat was boiling the gas in the bowls of my carbs. Steve Byers said he once had the same symptom on his car and he fixed it by building a new heat shield for under the carbs so that is what I did and that completely solved the " rough idle on a hot day at a stop light " problem no matter how high the engine temp gets when at a stop light.
3... I wished I could get the cars operating temperature to stop climbing when at a stoplight on a hot summer day. For this symptom, I installed a 12 inch Hayden fan as a pusher. My logic was that this would keep the air flowing through the radiator and then push some out of the engine bay when the mechanical fan is running slow. This seems to have fixed most of this symptom. My car will only get to 185 F or so after a long stop light.
4... A side effect of installing a new heat shield under the carbs was that the fresh air vent's air seems to be heated so much that I need to close the vent. It doesn't matter how long I have been driving down the road and the engine temps have gone back down to a few degrees above the thermostat rating again, the air coming out of the vent is much hotter than before I fixed the heat shield under the carbs. Apparently the heat in the engine bay is being redirected and trapped in the wing where it is heating up the air in the vent pipe. If I can fix this last heat symptom, I think I'll have all the heat gremlins beat.
....
So now I am wondering how to get better air flow through the bonnet. I don't really need to get more air flow through the radiator so I don't know if Ray's under frame/ radiator barrier would help with moving air back out from under the bonnet... Unless I cut some reverse louvers in it so the air would push up into the engine bay ??
Or I could order one of those wrap around insulation products to insulate the whole air vent pipe ??
Or cut some holes in the wings to install the rally air vents ??

:hammer:
Ed