The flow rate argument pops up way too often. Ask yourself this: are you trying to cool your motor, or are you trying to heat your water? If you are trying to heat your water, then having the water sit on the heat source will do that (slow rate). We're not trying to do that though. We are cooling the motor. All we care about is the delta. We want the lowest possible water temperature at all times. This is done by replacing the water that is being heated as soon as possible. With that said, we want a fast flow rate. If the water comes out of the boat warm, then it's sitting there way too long. This is an open loop system. Unlike in a car's cooling system (closed loop) we don't care about what happens after the water takes on heat. We just want it gone.
As for the tubing size, it doesn't really matter at the lengths that we work with. It's a similar concept for our electrical wiring. As long as it isn't the smallest (most restrictive) portion, there shouldn't be a single cause for concern. Now if we wanted distance, as in several meters/yards, then you start to look at the increasing boundary layer growing on the tubing walls. That's why all of our infrastructure uses giant piping in comparison to what we use, even if we are at the same flow rate or current draw (amps).
As for the tubing size, it doesn't really matter at the lengths that we work with. It's a similar concept for our electrical wiring. As long as it isn't the smallest (most restrictive) portion, there shouldn't be a single cause for concern. Now if we wanted distance, as in several meters/yards, then you start to look at the increasing boundary layer growing on the tubing walls. That's why all of our infrastructure uses giant piping in comparison to what we use, even if we are at the same flow rate or current draw (amps).
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