Arrow Fat Left Icon Arrow Fat Right Icon Arrow Right Icon Cart Icon Close Circle Icon Expand Arrows Icon Hamburger Icon Information Icon Down Arrow Icon Mail Icon Mini Cart Icon Person Icon Ruler Icon Search Icon Shirt Icon Triangle Icon Bag Icon Play Video

Commons Questions about Hi Flow Pumps

Why Make a Hi Flow Water Pump?

FlowKooler introduced the first hi flow pumps to the aftermarket and continues to improve impeller design to this day. Increased flow helps cool a hot engine by reducing the cycle time between the heat source and the heat sink.  This increase exposure creates more opportunities to shed heat and drop the engine temperature. FlowKooler’s impellers are precision machined from billet aluminum and designed to increase flow of the coolant. Impellers feature larger diameters, tighter vane-to-casting clearances, shrouding, porting and have incremental vanes.

These design elements are incorporated into the impeller for one purpose; to generate more flow to cool hot engines. Each impeller is protected from corrosion with a Military grade Type II Class II anodized surface coating to protect against corrosion and the damages of electrolysis.

Engines at idle, engine cruising at slow speeds or engines stuck in stop-and-go conditions have something in common; lower coolant flow rate and reduced air circulation through the radiator. Flowkooler pumps increase the flow and create highway-speed flow rates. The pumps continue to deliver higher flow all along the rpm curve and when system throughput is maximized, FlowKooler pumps build block pressure. Increasing the block pressure by as much as 22% helps reduces hot spots on cylinder walls, prevents the formation of steam pockets in the engine block and prevents the cavitation of the impeller.

FlowKooler hi flow water pumps’ incremental vanes carve up the workload and conserve as much as 2.2% horsepower.

Because FlowKooler pumps reduce engine temperatures as much as 30 degrees, they are frequently recommended by aluminum radiator manufacturers as a necessary tool of cooling for hot engines with thin radiator cores and reduced capacity.

Who uses a Hi Flow Water Pump?

A lot of people.  Whether it is in stop and go traffic, a slow moving parade, in line at a car show, off road on the trails or hauling a heavy load up a grade, cars and trucks experience reduced airflow through the radiator due to slower speeds.  The lower rpm reduces the cycle time between engine and the heat exchanger (radiator).  Designing pumps to flow more helps.  FlowKooler has  sold pumps to muscle car owners, street rodders, off road rock crawlers, people towing RVs and horse trailers, boat owners and even Propane powered trucks!  We even get request for bespoke impellers for industrial applications like gensets and oil field pumps.

Isn't every water pump hi flow?

You would think so reading their web sites and catalog listings.  The reality is any manufacturer can claim high flow rate and few make any effort to material change their product.  If their brand is strong enough it just becomes accepted.  The proof however lies inside the pump.  Flip the pump around and take a look at the impeller.  If you see the same stamped steel or the same casting in all of them then you have your answer.  Its all coming from the same plant in China.

What are the benefits of a hi flow water pump?

1. Higher Flow Rates Lower Engine Temperature

Most engines keep cool at highway speed.  It makes sense; the engine is turning the water pump rapidly and sending coolant through the radiator.  The radiator has good airflow at highway speed and hot air is being sucked out of the engine compartment.  Of course engines stay cooler in these conditions. 

At low speed, it is a different story; engines tend to heat up when you face limited airflow, trapped airflow and slower moving coolant.  These conditions exist in stop-and-go traffic, at car shows, rock crawling or off-road or in any vehicle under a load. FlowKooler has focused on increasing the flow rates at lower rpms to resolve low speed overheating.  At idle our pumps pump more than twice other pumps and we outflow “performance” pumps by 20%.  FlowKooler pumps take the coolant out of the engine and put it in the heat exchanger or radiator to get it out of your system and keep you cool.

2. Higher Block Pressure Prevents a Vapor Barrier

When you send a higher volume of fluid through a fixed diameter e.g. water jacket, thermostat housing, thin tube aluminum radiator etc and the cooling system passage itself becomes restrictive pressure builds in the block. That block pressure helps squeeze air out of the system that will impede your heat exchange.

3. Higher Block Pressure Eliminates Hot Spots and Steam Pockets

Engine blocks machined with limited or no cooling jacket can result in steam pockets and hot spots.  Boring is great for getting more power out of your engine but notorious for contributing to overheating.  At idle the creation of a hot spot at the top of the cylinder may be enough to cause pre-ignition. In the extreme, steam pockets can lead to detonation (hot spots in the cylinder wall) and detonation leads to broken parts. At high rpm the coolant moves through the block fast enough to prevent any steam pockets from forming. FlowKooler pumps flow more coolant through the system at low speed and simultaneously raise engine block pressure 22%.  This helps prevent their formation of a steam pockets and suppress es engine hot spots caused by them.

4. Higher Block Pressure Prevents Early Cavitation

Cavitation is the formation of vapor bubbles in a flowing liquid where the pressure of the liquid falls below its vapor pressure. When the vapor bubble that forms rapidly collapses it produces a  destructive shock wave that damages the interior wall of the engine block and other components, causes vibrations and noise and results in a loss of flow efficiency. FlowKooler impellers are designed to tighten clearances to reduce "slop" in the casting chamber and build that system pressure.  This helps to prevent the onset of cavitation.

5. Higher Flow Rate Stops the Knock

Knock, detonation or ping…call it what you want - it is a problem.  Ping heard when the engine is shut off may be the result of pre-ignition.  Pre-ignition results from the air/fuel mixture igniting in the cylinder before the spark plug fires from an ignition source other than the spark.  Hot spots can damage to the point they actual burn holes right through the top of pistons. Causes include:

  • Carbon deposits form a heat barrier
  • An overheated spark plug
  • A sharp edge in the combustion chamber or on top of a piston
  • A sharp edges on valves
  • A lean fuel mixture
  • Low coolant level
  • Slipping fan clutch
  • Failed electric cooling fan

Flowkooler hi flow pumps help reduce engine temperatures and stop the after run or pinging characteristic of a pre-ignition condition. Knock can also occur when the combustion of in the cylinder starts off correctly with spark plug ignition but one or more pockets of air/fuel mixture explode outside the envelope of the normal combustion front ignition.  It will cause the peak of the combustion process to occur outside of the optimum moment and results in a characteristic metallic "pinging" sound.  The other consequence is an increases in cylinder pressure which can be harmless or destructive to rings piston or bearings.

6. Better Design Helps Gain Horsepower

A poorly designed water pump casting and impeller can result in wasted horsepower.  FlowKooler pumps are designed to move water more efficiently from the radiator to the block to keep you cool. Some refer to the improvement in flow efficiency as a gain in horsepower,  other call  it a conservation of horsepower. Whatever you call it, FlowKooler pumps are 32% more efficient than OEMs which means less horsepower is used to turn them.

Hold on...doesn't the coolant have to have more time in the radiator to cool?

 No.  But a lot of people still think so.  We have come up with some explanations for the Doubting Thomas.

 Debunking the I Can Have It Both Ways Theory

 The water has to have time to cool argument is most common one we hear.  In a closed loop system if you keep the fluid in the heat exchanger you are simultaneously keeping it in the block longer.   Unfortunately, the block is the part that is generating the heat.   Sending hot coolant from your source (engine) through the heat exchanger (radiator) to the sink (air) will transfer heat as long as there is a temperature difference between the source and sink.   The engine is still generating heat the whole time so why keep the coolant there any longer than you have to.

 Debunking The Conscientious Electron Theory

We hear that the coolant has  to stay in the system longer to cool but what is heat transfer really but conduction, convection and radiation of electrons.  The fluid in your system transfers those electrons based principally on the source-sink differential and the exchange material's transfer rate.  An electron moves at varying speeds - Bohr's model has it moving at 2 million meter/second. But let's just agree it is fast (really really fast).  Far faster than the flow rate of the water pump.   Your engine coolant's electrons do not know (or care) how fast you send then through the system - they just knows that the source is hotter than the sink and off they go.

Debunking Grandpa's Flathead Washer Theory

"But wait a minute, I know Grandpa' used to put washers in his flathead to slow the flow and cool his engine."  We know people did this too.  They still do it but the cooling benefit is not from the slower flow but the pressure that builds from the restriction.  Consider that Grandpa had two flathead water pumps sending twice the volume through the same size radiator core.  In a non pressure system he likely lost fluid on the track or road. We have use pressure caps since the late thirties to remedy this.

Ask Grandpa  and he might tell you his overheating woes came when he tore up the track at high speed.  The overheating could be the result of cavitation in his pump due to the higher rpm.

Restricting his flow with a washer build up his pump pressure and the pressure in the block helped reduce the onset of hot spots on his cylinder walls and formation of steam pockets.   So Grandpa was on to something but just not for the reason most people think.  This restrictions makes sense when your rpm is excessive but it rarely makes sense normal driving conditions. 

If you doubt this thinking then try this simple Ask Dr. Science experiment where you restrict the pump on the suction side; just clamp off the lower hose while you watch your temp gauge.  Hopefully, you will debunk Grandpa's theory yourself before you experience vapor lock. 

Restriction is not all bad if it serves to prevent cavitation.  Cavitation occurs when a pump turns so fast that you generate lower pressure and air bubbles or vapor forms.  These bubbles eventually implode and damage the engine block wall and impeller. Rapidly spinning the impeller can literally rip the air from water but may not actually move the fluid, it's tantamount to turning an eggbeater in a paint bucket.  Restricting the fluid flow to raise system pressure in the block may help prevent cavitation at higher RPM but is it necessary for most vehicles?

No.  Most vehicles do not need to restrict flow because they do not reach or sustain high RPM.  Additionally, thin aluminum radiators already restrict by design e.g. fewer rows of tubes.  Restrict it further and you may as well hose clamp the lower radiator hose and we know how that works out.   When you face Grandpa on the track you may want your washers, otherwise, keep them in the toolkit.

Simply put, you have a far better chance of keeping your cool with a greater flow rate through your heat exchanger than gathering heat in your engine block.

.badge-soldout { display: none !important; }