| ||||
Moderated by: Greg Fletcher |
|
oil cooler sandwich plate | Rate Topic |
Author | Post |
---|
Posted: 02-02-2017 03:28 am |
|
1st Post |
Bfitz241 Member
|
Please forgive my ignorance, but what holds the oil cooler sandwich plate in position? I've read about the o ring behind it, but no mention of how it is tightened. Thanks
|
||||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-02-2017 09:06 am |
|
2nd Post |
subwoofer Member
|
There is a male/female nut extending the centre channel (consumer side). It clamps the sandwich in place and provides threads for the filter (or the next sandwich if you have a separate one for sensors) to thread on to. -- Joachim Last edited on 02-02-2017 09:07 am by subwoofer |
|||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-03-2017 12:21 am |
|
3rd Post |
Bfitz241 Member
|
thanks, to make sure I understand you; on the side that the I screw the oil filter, there will be a hex that I can put a socket over to tighten the assembly, correct?
|
||||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-03-2017 01:59 am |
|
4th Post |
Tom Bradley Member
|
On mine there never was a hex nut. The sandwich plate to the oil cooler is just held in place when the oil filter is installed. When the filter is removed, the plate can be removed as well. It has always worked OK. Maybe the nut was lost by the P.O.? The parts manual does not show any nut.
|
|||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-03-2017 02:36 am |
|
5th Post |
Bfitz241 Member
|
OK....as an alternative, is the centre of the attaching fitting machined as a hex so as to allow the use of an allen wrench to tighten it? I can't see the oil filter fitting just being screwed in by hand....then again it is British....I can see them using the filter as a nut to hold the whole mess together ...guess I should just pull the filter and get a mirror....Tomorrow's project...thanks for trying Last edited on 02-03-2017 02:38 am by Bfitz241 |
||||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-03-2017 04:51 am |
|
6th Post |
Tom Bradley Member
|
The extension fitting is just round, no hex machining. See pic below from the parts catalog. I never had a problem removing or replacing it by hand. Attachment: oil filter diverter.jpg (Downloaded 61 times)
|
|||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-03-2017 05:01 am |
|
7th Post |
Bfitz241 Member
|
Thanks for the picture. So the oil filter holds the whole thing together...got it
|
||||||||||||||
|
Posted: 02-04-2017 02:15 am |
|
8th Post |
Esprit2 Member
|
Bfitz241 wrote:Thanks for the picture. So the oil filter holds the whole thing together...got it Bingo ! Without the sandwich plate in place, there is a short length of threaded pipe screwed into the Auxiliary Housing. It's long enough to stick out 'about' one inch when fully seated. The oil filter screws onto that threaded stub, and tightens securely in place. With the sandwich plate, that threaded stub is too short, and wouldn't stick out for the filter to thread on. So, it is first removed, then the male-female threaded extender, item 13 in the drawing above, is screwed into the Aux Housing. Then the original male threaded pipe is screwed into the adapter. The extender/ adapter is approximately as long as the sandwich plate is thick. So with the S-plate in place, the male threaded stub still has about the same exposure it had without the S-plate. Spin the oil filter on and tighten it down. The oil filter then acts as the nut that pulls the assembly together, sealing the joints on both sides. The oil filter has a square rubber O-ring that seals against the outside of the Sandwich Plate, and the S-Plate has a similar O-ring that seals against the Aux Housing. Both O-rings must be in place. The oil filter's O-ring is replaced along with each new oil filter. However, the sandwich plate's O-ring is often forgotten, allowed to age and then loses its effectiveness. It should also be replaced periodically. Replacement O-rings are available from Delta Motorsports or Lotus vendors. Or, Brett Gibson reports that the O-ring from a Fram PH3682 filter is a match. Regards, Tim Engel Last edited on 07-28-2019 08:07 pm by Esprit2 |
|||||||||||||
|
Current time is 05:50 am | |
> Jensen Healey & Jensen GT Tech > Engine & Transmission > oil cooler sandwich plate | Top |