Even though the oil cooler is pretty solid with the added aluminum angle I put on the corner of the baffle, people tend to recommend still adding additional stiffness to the whole setup to keep the baffle from cracking. One common approach is to add some sort of a brace from the inside edge of the cooler over to a rocker cover screw to essentially create a rigid triangle. I had some leftover steel tubing from when I made my exhaust pipe hangers, so I decided to use that to create the brace. I tried and failed 3 times - that tubing was just too thick to get bent at the exact angles needed (not only bent to go from the cooler out to the rocker cover screw, but also bent at a second angle to drop down vertically as well). I finally gave up and ordered some steel tubing of the same size but half the wall thickness. Still plenty strong, and bending was much easier. With that in place, I think the cooler is rock solid to the shaking baffle, and the baffle is solid to the shaking cylinder. Hopefully that means no baffle cracks.
Sunday, May 17, 2026
Misc. Odd Jobs
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Oil Door
Most of today was spent catching up on yard work, then an additional chunk of time was spent building a doubler/frame for the oil filler door that it turned out I didn't even need. I don't like the standard Van's approach to the oil filler door hinge and latches, so I had bought a hidden hinge setup and a couple of extra skybolts a while ago. The hinge is a super old design from 30 or 40 years ago, complete with hand drawn plans and instructions. My mistake was not realizing that Van's has changed the cowl since these plans were drawn. The old cowl design had you cut out a hole the same size as the door, meaning a piece of aluminum was needed to ring the opening to act as the backstop for the door. Now, however, Van's has built a shelf into the cowl so the aluminum backer isn't necessary. I should have thought about that, but was on autopilot and just following the plans.
I ultimately ended up chopping up all of my hard work and just using a few pieces for the top and bottom to act as a doubler for the rivets.
I got sidetracked as I was getting ready to drill the skybolts (go in the angled portion at the bottom edge), so that's for another day.
Saturday, May 2, 2026
Oil Shutter Control Cable
I had always figured I'd be drilling another hole through the firewall for the oil cooler shutter cable. After a lot of contortions trying to figure out how to route the cable without interfering with anything else, the obvious solution hit me - just route it through the existing penetration on the right side firewall where all of the wires go through. I clamped the cable to the right rib and wrapped the portion in the firewall passthrough with spiral wrap and silicone tape to keep it from chaffing wires.
I put an adel clamp on the baffle as well as the engine mount.
I still don't love that the push/pull direction is the opposite of what it would ideally be (push to close, pull to open - I'd prefer it to be push to open since that's where it will be 90% of the time), but reversing it would have been a real pain. I'll get over it. I'll have to figure out how to change the label on the panel without causing too much damage though.
Friday, May 1, 2026
EGT/CHT Wires & Crankcase Vacuum Kit
I finished up the lower spark plug and EGT/CHT wire routing tonight. The EGT and CHT wires are all differing lengths since they ship the same length but obviously have different distances to travel to get to each cylinder and exhaust pipe. They already come with spade connectors crimped on, so I took the lazy way out and just bundled them up to get them to land in the same general location. Then I trimmed the sensor wires that come from the engine black box and crimped connectors on (I doubled back those wires to give myself some extra length to put a new connector on should I ever need to). For now the connectors are all just hanging out so I can test the connections, but I'll eventually put some wire wrap on them to clean them up. The left and right side are done about the same - I just forgot to get a picture of the finished right side.
I fired up the EFIS to see if I at least had some sensor readings. Success! All CHT readings are the same, which they should be, and all of the EGT readings are also the same. I put a heat gun on one of the cylinder heads and exhaust pipes to make sure the sensors were indeed reading correctly. Everything seems to be working as it should.
The other day I connected the oil breather crankcase vacuum valve to the left exhaust pipe. I removed the Van's rubber hose that was on the oil breather port and replaced it with the much nicer silicone tube that came with the Antisplat kit. This is the bright blue tube in the picture. While it is getting pretty tight behind the engine, the picture actually makes it look tighter than it really is. Everything has room and is not rubbing anywhere.
The tube swings down behind the oil cooler and drops down to the exhaust valve. I split the tube to insert a blow off valve and tube. This is a one way valve that will pop open if the valve at the exhaust ever gets plugged - theoretically saving me from a blown front seal on the engine. I plan to check the exhaust valve at every oil change, so it should not ever get to the point where it can clog up, but better safe than sorry.
I haven't routed the blow off valve tube yet. I think I'll just clamp it to the firewall where the Van's oil breather line was supposed to be clamped, then just let it hang over the exhaust. There shouldn't ever be anything coming out of it unless it's an emergency, and if that's the case I don't really care about the oil that'll be on the belly from it.






















