Regarding the BT46 "surface-cooling", it was all part of a bigger plan.
With the advent of Lotus 78 1977, Murray quickly realized that groud-effect was the way to go, but for 1978 he would be stuck with the massive Alfa Romeo engine, which was not suitable for a venturi-underbody, besides it required extensive cooling.
The BT46 was therefore designed around the concept of a giant fan in the back to suck air through the enclosed engine-bay and rear-mounted oil- and water radiators.
In the process, the fan created an underpressure under the car, which was said just to be a bi-product of the cooling, but was of course the true objective.
In order to make the cooling-argument more plausible, as well as create a smoke-screen to cover what they were realy up to, the surface-cooling hoax was presented, but was in reality just the fan-car without the fan. If you look carefully, those "cooling-pads" are just attached to the surface of the original aluminium-tub, there's no complex plumbing behind them.
http://www.forix.com/8w/6thgear/brabham-bt46.jpg
Murray was an engineer, he would have had very little difficulty to verify what riff_raff and others explained above.
Imagine being an F1 designer in them days, must have been a blast.