gambler wrote:Is there a speculation thread in here somewhere that studies air/air compared to water/air. I would like to know the volume of air required for each to achieve the same amount of heat reduction. I know specific numbers cant be known, but generaly if one requires more air than another would be the answer I'm looking for. Thanks in advance.
Generally the air-liquid-air system will under perform due to the two additional convective heat transfer interfaces. Think of the air-air system as two air streams with a large plate of aluminium separating them. Now replace the aluminium plate with two plates with a liquid stream in between - thats the air-liqid-air system. You can see there is a "thicker" barrier for the heat to cross.
If the lowest possible final temperature for the intake air is required, air-air has the advantage.
If a higher intake air temperature can be tolerated, the air-liquid-air system can permit smaller heat exchangers and remote location e.g. the Charge Air Cooler can be located where the intake air ducting already is, allowing a more direct and lower volume intake.