Amazing how throughly these animated videos demystify these systems! Thanks for providing these powerful animation free to the public! It is a great service you all are doing!
I’m sure it’s been said 1000x already but this is an amazing visual representation of the cooling system on an engine. I enjoy the animated aspects of this as it’s very clear. Amazing work!
Master mechanics deserve a lot more credit and they shouldn’t even have to get their hands dirty at all just stand and point. You almost need a doctorate degree to understand these vehicles now. Great video.
Thermostates are usually set to 190-210 degrees Fahrenheit. Not 200-250 degrees Celsius like you stated in the video. 200 degrees Celsius is 392 degrees Fahrenheit, at which point the coolant would boil.
@@ryancox6268 very incorrect. The pressure raises the boiling point it does not make it nonexistent. A 50/50 mix of glycol and water at 15 psi boils at 268 degrees F.
@@Redtooth75the SAME logic applies to boiling water at HIGH altitude. Up in the mountain it takes LOWER temperature to boil water BECAUSE of lower atmospheric pressure. Same concept same logic.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 who said that water is in engine cooling system🤣🤣🤣🤣, you should know that there is mixture of some kind of coolant fluid and distilled water and boiling point of it is 5-7 C deg over pure water at ambient pressure🤣😂🤣😂, and if temperature raises and approaches boiling point, pressure starts to raise and that moves up boiling point and cooling system is adjusted to keep up to 1.5-2 bars over ambient pressure, so coolant can hit over 110C deg before starts to boil🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣 @@prandomable
Thanks. Got to know more about how different components of an Automobile works . I'm a Mechanical engineering student and I love all these kinda stuff. 👍
I wish this animation technology existed when I was young, so vividly explained; so much simpler than a book. I played the video at a reduced speed to really allow the dynamics to sink in, snd master it thoroughly . Thanks a million, an old school 60 year old, now in the know when visiting the repair shop.
I love these animated videos with text, because I can paused the video, read the text, elaborate it, and resume the video. It is a really great way to teach. Great video.
"for dummies" Am learning every time. Am not a dummy but I feel like it when I can't understand so many mechanic words. This video is great. Thank you.
Lots of people think cars are hugely daunting, they have no clue how easy and simple they really are and the mechanics / physics behind them. I do everything on my car myself, it's incredibly simple, well structured engineering. You will easily learn how a car works within 10 minutes or less nowadays. This video as well explains the cooling system with so much detail, credit where credit's due it is so simple to follow along too I'm sure everyone who has never lifted a spanner would understand it after watching.
i always get worried every time i watch videos like these and see how much complexity there really is in all of these systems, and how much could go wrong
its just a lot of quite basic things working together you just have to take some time to do the steps its really simple when you look at the pieces individually it becomes like a puzzle which you already know where all the pieces go.
Keep up with that great work, very usefull illustraive animations. I think will be usefull to describe deep complex operations like differential, esp, abs, ecu controll sensor units, etc. Thanks for your videos!
Sir, thank you for this video. i really appreciate it ! :) i have to do a power point presentation and i couldnt find a single thing about the coolant system by searching the web in my mother language good thing that there are people on this planet that care to explain how things work
Let me correct some comments in your video: *) 1:10: At cold start the water is not coming from the lower tank of the radiator, but it is circulated in the engine only - you would generate a vakuum in the radiator! *) 1:50: 200-250°C operating temperatur is just wrong - it is in fact in most cars the opening temperature for the thermostat is about 82°C. *) 3:40: The fan is only actuated in case the temperatur in the radiator gets too high (e.g. ON-low power: ~92°C, ON-high power: 98°C, OFF: 88°C) - and not because coolant flows out outside the thermostat.
wow amazing video glad I found this channel as well!!! Now I better understand the engine cooling process... so thankful for videos of this caliber that are free to view!
My coolant sensor light went on yesterday while on German highway. I ignored it for a while till i noticed engine temp went up. Stopped at a fuel station and added coolant. This morning i wanted to know more and now i appreciate how the smallest details count. Thanks for awesome animation.
When the coolant cools down, a vacuum is presented in the radiator. It will suck the coolant from the reservoir back to the radiator, a check valve inside the radiator cap allows it flow backward.
@@Phi1Productions the coolant is pushed from the radiator to the recovery tank as the temperature rises, pressure rises, and the coolant actually expands from the heat. As it cools, it takes up less space, becomes denser, and effectively shrinks. As it does, it creates a vacuum in the cooling system. Nature hates a vacuum, so the coolant that was pushed into the recovery tank, is now drawn back in, replacing the vacuum space with coolant. This is why the level in the recovery tank has to be above a certain level, so air is not drawn into the cooling system. If air gets in, it causes bubbles in the coolant, this prevents the coolant from absorbing engine heat properly, and will force the coolant to boil, which is what overheating basically is.
The temperature gauge on the dashboard - surely it should measure the engine temperature instead of the coolant temperature? The gauge could just be measuring air temperature while the engine is being cooked!
excellent vid - except it doesn't show the full cycle of how the overflow tank works - giving it had an outlet at the bottom of overflow i was waiting to see how the coolant got back into the main system
gianpaolo18 When the coolant gets very hot (>110 degrees celcius approx) it will start to seep out of the radiator and into the overflow (also called expansion) tank; the coolant needs to have a means of escape as it expands to prevent damage to the cooling system. When the cooling system cools down again (once engine is switched off for instance) a vacuum will begin to form in the radiator/cooling system. As the vacuum forms, a valve automatically opens inside the radiator cap and the coolant is drawn back into the radiator from the overflow tank.
thias000 is right except that the return valve is not in the radiator cap for the example shown in the video. The example has the return line at the bottom of the expansion tank. So the return valve must be on that line.
thias000 I was also curious about this because I was under the impression that the overflow/expansion tank used the same tube to fill as it does to drain, but I suppose it doesn't have to work that way.
Beautiful animation, I really enjoyed watching it. I need to learn how to animate and add some to my channel. Thanks for another great video, keep em coming :) we love them!
Here's a hint, when you put a new speech bubble on the screen, just pause what's going on in the background so the reader has a chance to read it. Too many times, a speech bubble comes up and then a second later, animation starts and sometimes the location of the speech bubble is even changed. I was so scared of missing the animation that I would skip reading the speech bubble and then I wouldn't know what was going on.
the puzzle the engineers had to figure out was pressure, at least i think. If it gets hot enough, open this, if this gets hot enough open that. I really wanted to know exactly where the coolant was going inside of the engine and it made complete sense right at the beginning, thanks. Every mechanic should see this asap. And I did know what a radiator was but I didn't know exactly how it works, it cools down the coolant to send it back to the engine. Very informative.
I noticed that too, but maybe due to the pressure of coolant inside the tubes, the boiling point of water is going to change too due to pressure change .
190-220 degrees? really? with no scale? 190-220º K = solid water 190-220º F = liquid water (as long as the coolant circuit is pressurized, which raises the boiling point of water) 190-220º C = gaseous water you kind missed an important detail you know ... coolant circuit is pressurized, so water wont boil at 100c, but still it cant go much further than that. normal operating temperature ranges from 90c to 110c. Most modern cars run 105c thermostats, cause higher temperature improves emissions.
It is just wrong in the video. Regular coolant temperatures are usually between 82°C and 102°C, Oil temperatures are about 120°C to 150°C (150°C max for oil/air cooled engines), the cylinder head get's up to 250°C and the cylinder walls are about 85°C (like the coolant temperature), Pistons have a very special temperature profile over their zones from 100°C (bottom outside) to more than 220°C at the middle of the piston (Petrol engines) and from 80°C to 250°C at Diesel engines.
CMIIW but are you sure it's F? 200F=93C. It's not even the the temperature to boils water and you're saying that a combusted fuel only generate heats not hotter than boiling point of a water? Sorry for bad english.
Raja Ritonga yes it generates more heat than boiling water thats why you need a cooling system because you want the temperature to stay below the boiling point.
andy chen Oh right. One guy's minor fail means we are all idiots over here. You are clearly far superior. Good grief. Some people are so proud of themselves they probably pat themselves on the back when they have a good poop.
Pascal ///M Power I never understood why an engine needed cooling then I learned they have mini explosions happening every second and if there was no cooling the engine would destroy its self
I have a coolant leak from somewhere so I have been just refilling it with water because it would be expensive to keep wasting money on coolant. I know water doesnt work as well but its gonna have to do until I can find the leak
fixing it is not that easy shit be all rusted and stuck together parts be hard to get to customer watching you scrape your knuckles up over all I love the job
Well this is a great animation. It looks so simple yet very complicated. Very impressive that Engineers thought of this system. All in all cars are very complicated even though they only do one thing
big flaw. your saying the engine operating temperature is around 200ºC to 250ºC. dont know where you got that information from but water boils at 100ºC. at 200ºF its still hot for a engine to operate properly.
+Fernando Melo The coolant mixture is 50/50 in water and antifreeze (usually ethylene glycol) which not only lowers the freezing point of the coolant, but also raises the boiling point of the coolant. Thus, the coolant can take away even more heat from the engine without the entire system overheating.
thats not the point. the water in the mixture will boil once it reches its temperature. im preatu sure that the maximum operation temperature is 90ºc for a engine
Fernando Melo The antifreeze mixed with the water prevents it from boiling. auto.howstuffworks.com/cooling-system3.htm And he probably meant Farenheit instead of Celsius.
+Kev Lach That's right. My car the T-stat opens at 190 deg F. Therefore, if the movie wants to use the metric scale, it would have needed to say 90 to 121 deg C.
If your car is running at 200C, you have a major problem. Anything over 250F you should start worrying about. In my car if I'm over 220F I won't drive it.
i wish some car tuners are as smart as you, believe it or not, there are car tuners claim if the thermostat opens at 190f, it's 190f, LMAO.... i will say when the thermostat start opens at 190f, it won't fully melt the wax (fully open) at 205f ish....
I am impressed by the level of work that has gone into this. Fucking brilliant.
Amazing how throughly these animated videos demystify these systems! Thanks for providing these powerful animation free to the public! It is a great service you all are doing!
Right! This is kind of mind blowing how this all works for a car! 🤯
This is a really informative, simple, and yet comprehensive guide to the car's cooling system. Thanks a lot for putting it up
How to top up water
I’m sure it’s been said 1000x already but this is an amazing visual representation of the cooling system on an engine. I enjoy the animated aspects of this as it’s very clear. Amazing work!
Master mechanics deserve a lot more credit and they shouldn’t even have to get their hands dirty at all just stand and point. You almost need a doctorate degree to understand these vehicles now. Great video.
The people that are behind the scenes creating such complicated systems do have a degree.
The sheme is absolutely wrong and fanteasistttttttttttttttttt..............................
Animation is the only way to explain the entire thing effectively rather than books .. thanks for uploading
Doing a coolant flush on my truck, this video really helped me understand why I am doing what I am for the flush! Thank you!
How did the flush go?
Thermostates are usually set to 190-210 degrees Fahrenheit. Not 200-250 degrees Celsius like you stated in the video. 200 degrees Celsius is 392 degrees Fahrenheit, at which point the coolant would boil.
even 250F is too high for operating temp
@@ryancox6268 very incorrect. The pressure raises the boiling point it does not make it nonexistent. A 50/50 mix of glycol and water at 15 psi boils at 268 degrees F.
@@makantahi3731250F is above boiling point for water😂😅.
@@Redtooth75the SAME logic applies to boiling water at HIGH altitude. Up in the mountain it takes LOWER temperature to boil water BECAUSE of lower atmospheric pressure. Same concept same logic.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 who said that water is in engine cooling system🤣🤣🤣🤣, you should know that there is mixture of some kind of coolant fluid and distilled water and boiling point of it is 5-7 C deg over pure water at ambient pressure🤣😂🤣😂, and if temperature raises and approaches boiling point, pressure starts to raise and that moves up boiling point and cooling system is adjusted to keep up to 1.5-2 bars over ambient pressure, so coolant can hit over 110C deg before starts to boil🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣 @@prandomable
Finally I got to understand the whole process, very well explained and detailed. Thanks a lot. Keep up the good work.
Thanks. Got to know more about how different components of an Automobile works . I'm a Mechanical engineering student and I love all these kinda stuff. 👍
did you graduate already?
I wish this animation technology existed when I was young, so vividly explained; so much simpler than a book. I played the video at a reduced speed to really allow the dynamics to sink in, snd master it thoroughly . Thanks a million, an old school 60 year old, now in the know when visiting the repair shop.
Amazing video to explain the Coolant system of cars. I was always unsure of it.
Excellent video! Thanks very much for the efforts you put into this. Learned a lot in a few minutes and subscribed.
I love these animated videos with text, because I can paused the video, read the text, elaborate it, and resume the video. It is a really great way to teach. Great video.
Awesome! It couldn’t have been explained better! Keep it up! 👍🏽
"for dummies"
Am learning every time. Am not a dummy but I feel like it when I can't understand so many mechanic words.
This video is great. Thank you.
This is visual learning the most effective
this is an amazing animation of how the cooling system works for engines. Great job!!! Very educational and informative.
Pls tell how to top up generator woter
Best ever explained of my experience with minor adjustments. Many thanks!
Lots of people think cars are hugely daunting, they have no clue how easy and simple they really are and the mechanics / physics behind them. I do everything on my car myself, it's incredibly simple, well structured engineering. You will easily learn how a car works within 10 minutes or less nowadays. This video as well explains the cooling system with so much detail, credit where credit's due it is so simple to follow along too I'm sure everyone who has never lifted a spanner would understand it after watching.
i always get worried every time i watch videos like these and see how much complexity there really is in all of these systems, and how much could go wrong
If your car overheats, don't ignore it. You can blow your head gasket like that :P
thankfully mine doesn't, even in 100+ weather, but i cant still help but be nervous
its just a lot of quite basic things working together you just have to take some time to do the steps its really simple when you look at the pieces individually it becomes like a puzzle which you already know where all the pieces go.
adding coolant to a over heated engine can also blow the head gasket
Unclenate1000 me too, then in a few hours we hop in the car and forget, take for granted
Keep up with that great work, very usefull illustraive animations.
I think will be usefull to describe deep complex operations like differential, esp, abs, ecu controll sensor units, etc.
Thanks for your videos!
I love this channel. I have literally learned so much from these small videos.
the best video on youtube about engine cooling, Thank you so much for uploading this informative video.
omg thank you sooo much this is helping me with my assignment for physics :)
Awesome music! Love the loop.
one of the best auto channels on TH-cam! Thx Automotive Basics! This is much better than reading the info in a book
Great video, you even explained the mechanism of thermostat!
"the thermostat opens at 200-250 deg."
Celsius users: confused screaming
80-90°C 😅😅
तब तक इन्जन फट जायेगा
Sir, thank you for this video. i really appreciate it ! :)
i have to do a power point presentation and i couldnt find a single thing about the coolant system by searching the web in my mother language
good thing that there are people on this planet that care to explain how things work
+NakedAvanger what's your mother language?
David C. Romero it's alien language
Very well informed and the explanation is spot on. Great video!
Thanks for the great video, explains the basics very clearly.
I now fully understand my car cooling system thanks to your video. I am going to flush my coolant soon.
Lovely video .......... well explained.. Appriciate it... thanks.
Wow, this helped a ton. Thanks for the great work
thank you so much. Came clutch for my science presentation on this!!!
Such beautiful works of modern technology! Brings a tear to my eye😭
Let me correct some comments in your video:
*) 1:10: At cold start the water is not coming from the lower tank of the radiator, but it is circulated in the engine only - you would generate a vakuum in the radiator!
*) 1:50: 200-250°C operating temperatur is just wrong - it is in fact in most cars the opening temperature for the thermostat is about 82°C.
*) 3:40: The fan is only actuated in case the temperatur in the radiator gets too high (e.g. ON-low power: ~92°C, ON-high power: 98°C, OFF: 88°C) - and not because coolant flows out outside the thermostat.
lupuszzz well spotted
He's right
I’m guessing the 200C was supposed to be 200F.
Hi sir, at cold start,from where did the water pump draw its coolant?
lupuszzz 👌
Brilliant animation and breakdown! Thank you so much.
Great video showing the flow of coolant from start to end.
brilliant video
Dude, great video. How long did the animation take? Thumbs up to you. Keep it up
Absolutely amazing work
Thank you for sharing the animation; made very well and explained very clear...
wow amazing video glad I found this channel as well!!! Now I better understand the engine cooling process... so thankful for videos of this caliber that are free to view!
The thermostat with the wax thing blew my mind, it's so genius
the thermostat opens at about 90ºC and not 200ºC. please correct that. its 200ºF or 90ºC
1:57
On my car it opens at 90C it might be different on others
The caption seems to be worded incorrectly as well
he probably means engine temp, not coolant temp
redstoner200 yes I thought when I saw that that my tutor had said 96 and not 200 🤔
A very enjoyable way to learn how the cooling system works. Well done!
God bless whoever posted this clip here. Very educative!!!
interesting mechanics for non mechanic person like me
Awesome video. Music name please?
For a person with little car experience this video helped extremely thank you keep up the good work
there can't be a better way to explain a cooling system working and it's functions very well explained
Hey dude thanx for d video, it really gave me a holistic view of the cooling system :)
Keep up d good work (y)
+Nimish Khandelwal no prbs avni :-P
Nainika stop stalking :p
one small mistake at 5:11 in the description box: "TRANFER". Thanks for the phenomenal video!
My coolant sensor light went on yesterday while on German highway. I ignored it for a while till i noticed engine temp went up. Stopped at a fuel station and added coolant. This morning i wanted to know more and now i appreciate how the smallest details count. Thanks for awesome animation.
Very good and useful video. This helped me to understand the cooling system. Cheers!
So how does the coolant from reservoir go back to the radiator?
When the coolant cools down, a vacuum is presented in the radiator. It will suck the coolant from the reservoir back to the radiator, a check valve inside the radiator cap allows it flow backward.
Wot48 thanks!
I thought the coolant is pushed forward from the pressure generated by the water pump. I guess I was wrong all this time.
Same here
@@Phi1Productions the coolant is pushed from the radiator to the recovery tank as the temperature rises, pressure rises, and the coolant actually expands from the heat. As it cools, it takes up less space, becomes denser, and effectively shrinks. As it does, it creates a vacuum in the cooling system. Nature hates a vacuum, so the coolant that was pushed into the recovery tank, is now drawn back in, replacing the vacuum space with coolant. This is why the level in the recovery tank has to be above a certain level, so air is not drawn into the cooling system. If air gets in, it causes bubbles in the coolant, this prevents the coolant from absorbing engine heat properly, and will force the coolant to boil, which is what overheating basically is.
who ever thought of this design is a genius
Ollie k 🔥
my jeep is geting too hot in pasanger compartment . n over flow tank coolant is not geting over .can u pls rectify the problem 7349107638
Wow great video. Crisp explanation and excellent animation!! Thanks!!
Great video seriously!!!!
Thanks a lot for this masterpiece
The temperature gauge on the dashboard - surely it should measure the engine temperature instead of the coolant temperature?
The gauge could just be measuring air temperature while the engine is being cooked!
The coolant temperature is the engine temperature.
if it would be 200 to 250 deg Celsius the car would overheat the normal car working tempretaure is from 85°C to 100°C
thank you for this informative very well put and produced video thank you.
Absolutely superb explanation. Thanks for this video presentation, really appreciated.
200-250 deg cels of operating temp?
excellent vid - except it doesn't show the full cycle of how the overflow tank works - giving it had an outlet at the bottom of overflow i was waiting to see how the coolant got back into the main system
I was waiting for the same info haha
gianpaolo18 When the coolant gets very hot (>110 degrees celcius approx) it will start to seep out of the radiator and into the overflow (also called expansion) tank; the coolant needs to have a means of escape as it expands to prevent damage to the cooling system. When the cooling system cools down again (once engine is switched off for instance) a vacuum will begin to form in the radiator/cooling system. As the vacuum forms, a valve automatically opens inside the radiator cap and the coolant is drawn back into the radiator from the overflow tank.
thias000 is right except that the return valve is not in the radiator cap for the example shown in the video. The example has the return line at the bottom of the expansion tank. So the return valve must be on that line.
gianpaolo18 Me too. how does it work to return the overflow water to the tank.
thias000 I was also curious about this because I was under the impression that the overflow/expansion tank used the same tube to fill as it does to drain, but I suppose it doesn't have to work that way.
Beautiful animation, I really enjoyed watching it. I need to learn how to animate and add some to my channel. Thanks for another great video, keep em coming :) we love them!
You just reassured me on how my system works so I can properly flush the system and restore the car...thank you!
when you bought a car please take a minute to thank God for the engineers.
...or just thank the engineers
@@MacLaw3084 only God alone has given Knowledge to the Engineers. So All thanks to God
@@2000stalin unverifiable claim
@@2000stalin engineers read, learn, and experiment over time that’s how they become engineers. to say otherwise would require evidence.
@@-thecastletvshow-8206 nah
Here's a hint, when you put a new speech bubble on the screen, just pause what's going on in the background so the reader has a chance to read it.
Too many times, a speech bubble comes up and then a second later, animation starts and sometimes the location of the speech bubble is even changed. I was so scared of missing the animation that I would skip reading the speech bubble and then I wouldn't know what was going on.
kurisujpn
hmm ya i was gonna say the same thing coz i paused when i watched but true it doesn't make sense.
the puzzle the engineers had to figure out was pressure, at least i think. If it gets hot enough, open this, if this gets hot enough open that. I really wanted to know exactly where the coolant was going inside of the engine and it made complete sense right at the beginning, thanks. Every mechanic should see this asap. And I did know what a radiator was but I didn't know exactly how it works, it cools down the coolant to send it back to the engine. Very informative.
Clearest video on this subject I've seen! :)
anyone notice the 200-250 degrees C ?? really?!! that's twice boiling lol I'm sure he meant 200-250 degrees F
I noticed that too, but maybe due to the pressure of coolant inside the tubes, the boiling point of water is going to change too due to pressure change .
well thats normal temperatures for some diesel engines, especially old diesel engines.
Most gasoline engines operate at temperatures fluxuating between 190 to 220 degrees.
190-220 degrees? really? with no scale?
190-220º K = solid water
190-220º F = liquid water (as long as the coolant circuit is pressurized, which raises the boiling point of water)
190-220º C = gaseous water
you kind missed an important detail you know ...
coolant circuit is pressurized, so water wont boil at 100c, but still it cant go much further than that. normal operating temperature ranges from 90c to 110c. Most modern cars run 105c thermostats, cause higher temperature improves emissions.
It is just wrong in the video.
Regular coolant temperatures are usually between 82°C and 102°C, Oil temperatures are about 120°C to 150°C (150°C max for oil/air cooled engines), the cylinder head get's up to 250°C and the cylinder walls are about 85°C (like the coolant temperature), Pistons have a very special temperature profile over their zones from 100°C (bottom outside) to more than 220°C at the middle of the piston (Petrol engines) and from 80°C to 250°C at Diesel engines.
it's 200~205 F, not C
CMIIW but are you sure it's F? 200F=93C. It's not even the the temperature to boils water and you're saying that a combusted fuel only generate heats not hotter than boiling point of a water? Sorry for bad english.
it's why water is mix with coolant & the cooling system use pressure to increase boiling point
Raja Ritonga yes it generates more heat than boiling water thats why you need a cooling system because you want the temperature to stay below the boiling point.
250c ? this is a perfect example of american public school failure
andy chen Oh right. One guy's minor fail means we are all idiots over here. You are clearly far superior. Good grief. Some people are so proud of themselves they probably pat themselves on the back when they have a good poop.
Excellent explanation of how the cooling system works 👍 thanks
This is EXCELLENT. Thank you!!!
Looks complicated but it's not too difficult to understand it.
Pascal ///M Power I never understood why an engine needed cooling then I learned they have mini explosions happening every second and if there was no cooling the engine would destroy its self
Good but I think you meant 200-250 farenheight, not celsius.
thec4ke que x
thec4ke
Amazing animation, thank you so much 🙏
the one which clarifies all my doubts .. thank you
I have a coolant leak from somewhere so I have been just refilling it with water because it would be expensive to keep wasting money on coolant. I know water doesnt work as well but its gonna have to do until I can find the leak
its the water pump, ours has the same problem , drinks more coolant than a camel
Angel Diddy thats what im thinking too.. Do I need a new water pump or just the gasket?
Angel Diddy and so does mine!
to be real i changed the whole part& the engine belt(might have to) but i didnt have the tools so i went to my known mechanic
ah okay
I gotta say something about the music, itd kinda eerie in some sort of way.
Yeah, that knit knit sounds creepy
80's porn.
This was interesting. I decided I need to now learn how a car functions and this video is the first step in that process.
This is an excellent video. Thanks for your efforts.
fixing it is not that easy shit be all rusted and stuck together parts be hard to get to customer watching you scrape your knuckles up
over all
I love the job
@turco949 What kind of porn are you watching?
quite a lot of different types really for example beastiality
Tight cylinders get hot and lubricated by pistons stroking inside them.
Perfect Video how the car cooling system works. Thanks.
Well this is a great animation. It looks so simple yet very complicated. Very impressive that Engineers thought of this system. All in all cars are very complicated even though they only do one thing
big flaw. your saying the engine operating temperature is around 200ºC to 250ºC. dont know where you got that information from but water boils at 100ºC. at 200ºF its still hot for a engine to operate properly.
+Fernando Melo The coolant mixture is 50/50 in water and antifreeze (usually ethylene glycol) which not only lowers the freezing point of the coolant, but also raises the boiling point of the coolant. Thus, the coolant can take away even more heat from the engine without the entire system overheating.
thats not the point. the water in the mixture will boil once it reches its temperature. im preatu sure that the maximum operation temperature is 90ºc for a engine
Fernando Melo The antifreeze mixed with the water prevents it from boiling. auto.howstuffworks.com/cooling-system3.htm And he probably meant Farenheit instead of Celsius.
not really. unless you use a old school hot bulb engine i don't believe that you will ever get close to that temperature
+Fernando Melo Also, the boiling point of water is increased when it is pressurized (as it is in a car cooling system).
Haha 200 a 250°celcius 🌞
+edwin m no, F is bullshit. C is proper measurement .
+Kev Lach
That's right. My car the T-stat opens at 190 deg F. Therefore, if the movie wants to use the metric scale, it would have needed to say 90 to 121 deg C.
If your car is running at 200C, you have a major problem. Anything over 250F you should start worrying about. In my car if I'm over 220F I won't drive it.
It starts too open at 190F but doesn't fully open till 220+ depending on the engine.
i wish some car tuners are as smart as you, believe it or not, there are car tuners claim if the thermostat opens at 190f, it's 190f, LMAO.... i will say when the thermostat start opens at 190f, it won't fully melt the wax (fully open) at 205f ish....
Impeccable demonstration!,Now I know a thing or two about a car engine's cooling system!
Thank you, Sir! Well appreciated.
Great video!very helpful.simple and specified!👍
Love this detail and video.! Thank you
These animations are well done and very helpful
Cool graphics...easily understood...thanks!
Nice and perfect video to understand working of cooling system
no video more informative than this! Thanks.
Wonderful explanation. Very simple to understand. Thanks.
I love you!!!! Beautiful video and amazing learning experience :)