Optimal watercooling tubing setup

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  • benoitmathieu
    Junior Member
    • Jun 2013
    • 2

    #1

    Optimal watercooling tubing setup

    Hi there,
    first post for me but I already got lots of precious info from the forum.
    I recently got the Holy Smoke out of my MG29.
    After a 3 hours wait for the boat to come at hand distance by the only force of the water current and the wind, It confirmed my thought : burned ESC.
    I ran on stock setup with an Octura X642 propeller. I think I put the propeller line too deep in the water which drawn too much amps for the poor stock esc (60A) to stay "cool"
    I have now got a new 120 Amp esc and cleaned the mess inside the hull.
    Before rebuilding the MG, I wondered if there was an optimal watercooling tubing setup to follow to ensure best cooling efficiency, i.e. : put Esc or motor first?, how to prevent tubing from squeezing, do you choose shortest paths, ...
    I initially thought at a dual water pick-up, but it seems a bit of an overkill for my config (4S, not racing) and require hull or rudder modding. So if you have any good advice to optimize water-cooling with one single line, I would be happy to learn.

    Best,
    Benoit
  • SirBudman32
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2011
    • 625

    #2
    You want to cool the esc first then the motor. As for putting on a second pick up, every little bit helps. I have a stock Sv-27 running 4s and I have dual pick ups on it, Its not over kill if it helps keep everything cool. Shorter is better with the cooling lines.
    Modified Jae21, Stock Jae21, Cheetah, Ul-1, Shock Wave 26 V2 (Rescue Boat).

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    • iop65
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2013
      • 367

      #3
      i use larger tube :4mm inside-7mm out

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      • BHChieftain
        Fast Electric Addict
        • Nov 2009
        • 1969

        #4
        The ESC should have handled the x642 prop no problems on 4S (I upgrade the connectors to 5.5, but I don't think that would cause the ESC to die). The motor and ESC should come in cool on that prop-- maybe you had some debris blocking the water pickup or a kinked cooling line?

        Note, twice I've had my rudder pickup blocked by debris and caused a thermal shutdown-- motor and esc were super hot-- but when cleared it ran cool again.

        Chief

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        • benoitmathieu
          Junior Member
          • Jun 2013
          • 2

          #5
          Thanks a lot for these info.
          In fact, the esc thermal protection worked at least twice (power shutdown for a few seconds) before he finally burned.
          I should have paid more attention to it , stopped the boat and check cooling lines
          I will be more careful in the future.

          Who said you need to make your own (expensive) experience to learn?

          Benoit

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