I see, now is there an oil pump somewhere in the system or does oil pressure just push it through the filter and into other line? Also is there any oil cooling that takes place during this process?
The preliminary result on the exercise to get more heat into the oil is that, short of riding in ambient temps that are above 100*F or installing a full-wrap of insulation around the entire engine, it's really hard to get the oil hotter. 200-210*F is about normal and about all it will do.
As Paul says, the KLR engine is a giant radiator. In the winter, when ambients can drop below 60*F, oil temperatures drop down below 200*F. If it is much below 50*F, especially if it is wet, the oil can run as low as 160*F.
I'm waiting for winter and, at this point, merely hoping that I can find a way to keep the oil temperature up to around 200*F when it might normally be running in the 175*F range.
At this point, I have failed miserably against my goal of getting the oil up to 225*F.
When I first got my 03 I was scouring the internet for bootleg home-made oil coolers for this thing and I'm not sure why I was under the impression that it needed one in the first place. Maybe ill buy an oil filler cap with a temp gauge on it if im that worried about it.
One last question, where does the oil go after it passes through the cam?
The oil flows out the camshaft journal oil holes to lube the bearings, flows around the tappet buckets, lobes & bearing caps and down to the alternator case & crankcase thru the cam chain tunnel.
...and it goes through to the oil screen and into the oil pump where it starts its journey again.
Look at the oil temps on the is ride around town. See how long it takes to come up to operating temperature and note that, for a beach boy like me, it was friggin' hot out. It needs a heater rather than a cooler!
Thanks Tom appreciate the info. Seriously you guys are awesome, thanks for all your contributions to the the KLR community.
How important is it to clean that oil screen? Its not listed on the routine maintenance schedule to my knowledge, although I have seen people pull pieces of gasket out of theirs before.
I have never seen one that prevented the oil from flowing. Maybe @pdwestman has a larger perspective. My take would be that if you have reason to take the cover off, clean it. Otherwise, ride it.
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Related Threads
?
?
?
?
?
Kawasaki KLR Forum
303.2K posts
27.1K members
Since 2006
A forum community dedicated to Kawasaki KLR 650 motorcycle owners and enthusiasts. Come join the discussion about performance, modifications, adjustments, classifieds, troubleshooting, maintenance, conversions, and more!