Air Cooling - What It Is And Why It's A Thing Of The Past
Water-based cooling has been practiced for over 100 years, using the temperature difference between hot water and the cold incoming air to transfer unwanted heat away from your powertrain. And yet at one time, using simple airflow to cool your engine was prominent in the car world.
Engines designed for air cooling are configured differently to those cooled using water, with the most obvious difference being the use of fins covering the outside of the cylinder heads and cylinders. These days, this format of engine is only really common on motorbikes and quad-bikes, showing that only small capacity engines are trusted to cope with such a simple form of cooling.
The principles of air cooling follow those stated in my last article on cooling, with one of the main components being surface area. To maximise heat transfer, a large surface allows for more heat to be distributed to the surroundings rather than collecting into a small area of intense heat which would clog up and inevitably lead to overheating.
So the use of fins covering most of the engine block allows for the heat from the engine to be released over a much larger surface area than if the fins were absent, giving the powertrain much more chance of staying cool under load. The airflow is channelled strategically throughout these fins from an inlet (like the rear grill on old 911s and VW Beetles), allowing for convection (heat transfer) between the cold, fast moving air and the heat energy being produced by the engine’s combustion.
Many car companies practiced air cooling, with the most famous marques being Porsche and Volkswagen who for decades used simple air flow to cool their flat-four or flat-six engines successfully. But as petrolheads became hungrier and hungrier for more power, the reliability and capability of these basic cooling systems began to diminish.
A water-cooled engine uses a closed loop cooling system; this means that the use of a waterpump and cooling fan can be in constant use to keep the flow of coolant coursing throughout the engine with the fan keeping it cool even when the car is stationary.
On the other hand, air-cooling is an open system which relies massively upon a constant flow of air entering the engine bay, which is not always possible. Despite the use of large fans to try and suck air in for cooling, the heat generated by the larger capacity engines began to overcome the cooling systems, especially when sitting in traffic or driving at speeds that were not conducive to effective airflow. Less cold air was passing through the cooling fins results in a lack of a heat transfer from the engine to the surroundings.
Air-cooling did have its benefits though: weight was saved due to the lack of water and heat exchangers needed for a closed loop cooling system and maintenance was non-existent, unless some damage had been inflicted upon the cooling fins.
Nowadays, this old-school method of cooling is kept to small capacity engines due to the lack of heat they produce compared to larger, more powerful units. In the case of bikes and quads, the engine is generally exposed to the elements rather than covered, meaning efficient airflow can be achieved.
Cooling has moved on leaps and bounds since the days of air-cooling and there doesn’t seem to be any route back into the car market for the practice. Some diehard 911 fans may still pine after the distinctive feel of the air-cooled flat-sixes, but considering even the Carrera is now twin-turbocharged and even more powerful than before, there really is no way back.
There is something satisfying about the accuracy of engineering in designing an air-cooled engine with its rows of fins strategically positioned and it is startling nowadays to imagine performance cars without a major source of coolant. But due to a power battle and the inherent necessity of reliability in the automotive world, air-cooling must now stay in the history books, where it sadly belongs.
Comments
Don’t forget that the other crucial feature for cooling the engine even nowadays is with engine oil. It’s hard for ordinary daily drivers to boil the oil but in racing it’s vital to keep the oil cool and therefore pretty much everything that moves inside the engine. That’s why many performance vehicles today still have oil temperature gauges (bmw m cars, porsches, etc.). Running engine oil through oil coolers at a fast pace and keeping it below 104-105 was more than enough to run turbocharged Porsches racing for decades. If you overheat the coolant it may be bad, but if you overheat the oil (over 140 degrees celsius) it’s fatal.
One of the countless reasons I love my car so much 👌
Pretty sure the real reason engines are no longer air cooled is because the non conformity of cooling meaning it is much harder to get an engine to run within the modern emission control parameters. As some previous posts show, air cooled engine can be very big and/or very powerful.
I believe what really killed air cooled engines were dual overhead cam multivalve designs. They generate more heat in the head, compared to pushrod or ohc engines, to be cooled by just air. So it is power and more importantly emissions that forced everyone to go multivalve killing air cooled engines.
I thought it was gonna be because of global warming…
*emissions. And yes. Global warming is a myth
Why can’t you have both? A heat sink block with water cooling?