Roog
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- #101
I think you would be better off pulling air in somewhere else (like near your motor(s) and use the vent above the engine as an exit, since heat tries to go up. You'd be fighting that to push the heat to some other exit otherwise, while heating everything up along its path out of the body.
I would treat the loco body as a computer case. Posititive pressure works best. So a push pull config. A couple intake fans with a single exit fan, while sealing everything else up as best you can. You could do that with some dryer vent tubing. But make sure the nitro gets the air flowing directly by it on its way out of the body. Or you could consider water cooling the head by wrapping a water tube around it. But then you'd still need a fan or two and a radiator. Look at 240 size AIO coolers if you want to look into it. Not sure if that would fit though. But you could find a small heater core out of a car and build your own cooler.
If you go the fan route, look at HP Server fans. They move a ton of air, are really loud, and would make your loco sound even more realistic![]()
Computer cooling did cross my mind, if I could find a marine engine of suitable capacity and small size a remote radiator would be a good call. Push and pull fans mounted in the top of the bodywork could be a neat solution. I have first hand experience of full sized bespoke generator cooling from above and what we found was the air short circuited, in that it didn’t properly pass over the engine block.
I remember the old modelling books, with the absence of purpose made marine engines people were forced into wrapping coils of copper tube around the cylinder head, never been sure how effective this is. Of course I would have to pump the water around the cooling circuit, are there suitable low voltage pumps? Yet more systems!