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Know Your Car  :  Car Cooling System

THE  RADIATOR
  • Overview
  • The Plumbing
  • Cooling Fluid
  • Water Pump
  • The Engine
  • The Radiator
  • Pressure Cap
  • The Thermostat
  • The Fan
  • Heating System
  • A radiator is a type of heat exchanger. It is designed to transfer heat from the hot coolant that flows through it to the air blown through it by the fan.

    Most modern cars use aluminium radiators. These radiators are made by brazing thin aluminum fins to flattened aluminum tubes. The coolant flows from the inlet to the outlet through many tubes mounted in a parallel arrangement. The fins conduct the heat from the tubes and transfer it to the air flowing through the radiator.

    The tubes sometimes have a type of fin inserted into them called a turbulator, which increases the turbulence of the fluid flowing through the tubes. If the fluid flowed very smoothly through the tubes, only the fluid actually touching the tubes would be cooled directly.

    The amount of heat transferred to the tubes from the fluid running through them depends on the difference in temperature between the tube and the fluid touching it. So if the fluid that is in contact with the tube cools down quickly, less heat will be transferred. By creating turbulence inside the tube, all the fluid mixes together, keeping the temperature of the fluid touching the tubes up so that more heat can be extracted, and all the fluid inside the tube is used effectively.

    Radiators usually have a tank on each side, and inside tank is a transmission cooler. The transmission cooler is like a radiator within a radiator, except instead of exchanging heat with the air, the oil exchanges heat with the coolant in the radiator.
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