dry sump and regular oil system
humm... never heard of a dry sump system, how would ur rods get oil? normally ur crank and bottom of the rods are in the oil sump and as the crank turns it splashes the oil around getting everything else nice and lubricated. ????
Its a pressurized oiling system, incase under hard cornering the oil sump is not submerged in oil, it takes it from a presurized oil tank, which takes over the duties of the sump, it allows for a shallower oil pan. I think, its somewhere close along those lines.
Originally posted by likaciv
Its a pressurized oiling system, incase under hard cornering the oil sump is not submerged in oil, it takes it from a presurized oil tank, which takes over the duties of the sump, it allows for a shallower oil pan. I think, its somewhere close along those lines.
Its a pressurized oiling system, incase under hard cornering the oil sump is not submerged in oil, it takes it from a presurized oil tank, which takes over the duties of the sump, it allows for a shallower oil pan. I think, its somewhere close along those lines.
what he said :thumbup:
Originally posted by likaciv
Its a pressurized oiling system, incase under hard cornering the oil sump is not submerged in oil, it takes it from a presurized oil tank, which takes over the duties of the sump, it allows for a shallower oil pan. I think, its somewhere close along those lines.
Its a pressurized oiling system, incase under hard cornering the oil sump is not submerged in oil, it takes it from a presurized oil tank, which takes over the duties of the sump, it allows for a shallower oil pan. I think, its somewhere close along those lines.
Dry sump oil pans are much shallower than wet sumps (better ground clearance). Oil pressure is maintained during extreme cornering. Less windage losses and oil whipping at high RPM.
Down side is it's a more complex and expensive system. Also many more points for oil leaks to occur.


