Hi Chris
Your description was very clear, understood it completely.
The grey's oiling system has also been a bit of worry for me. It's easy to see where the term "sludge motors" come from, hey .
I'm doing a Norman supercharged, Appendix J grey for my FE and it will need good oiling, hence the idea of the full flow filtration. Plus having the oil outside of the block is a chance to get rid of some excess heat too.
Your setup sounds very involved compared to the way I come up with. I'll try to explain. If you have your FE shop manual handy( page 133) it will make it easier to see what I'm getting at. Here it goes:
the oil feed from the pump is to be blocked just below where it meets the horizontal gallery. This means tapping the verticle gallery in the block (from the pump) and inserting a loctited grub screw at the very top just below the "tee".
Next step is to penetrate the block at 90 degrees midway between the oil pressure switch and the sump rail. This will meet up with the verticle gallery and give you an oil feed to the outside of the block, or supply to the external filter.
Next bit is tricky: Above the oil pressure switch you'll notice a grub screw. Using the bottom of that grub screw as a guide, if you drill into the block, downwards at approx 48 degrees you miss the cam bearing and pick up the horizontal oil gallery just before the "tee" section. This hole now becomes the oil return back into the block. The oil pressure switch remains in the same postion.
Those 2 new holes, the outlet (the bottom hole) and the return ( top hole) are tapped the accept the same "connector" that is screwed into the base of the block that oil delivery pipe screws into. Doing this allows the use of the same size steel pipe (as used in the sump) to connect to the external filter .
From those 2 new fittings it's just a matter of running steel pipe to and from the new oil filter. I was planning on using a modified AC bypass canister. Plan is to fit large inlet and outlet ports, the same fittings we just tapped into the side of the block. Also the centre post inside the canister has to have the original small supply hole at the bottom welded up, and a new very large hole ground into it at the top, in line with the fitting on the side of the canister that returns the oil back to the block. Having this new hole up top of the post, and in line with the outlet will mean the canister will remain full of oil after shut down.
I want to use the old style AC bypass unit as it is a period style restoration. Nothing made after, say late 60's, is to be used on the car. All old technology, none of this new fancy stuff.
How does that sound? Lost? Please let me know what you think.
Once i get my shed cleaned up a bit I'll experiment on an old donk I have (sorry Ed) and see what happens. My main concern is the new return gallery clearing the cam bearing. I'm very confident it will work, just a matter of getting the measurements right first go.
Did you modify the bypass valve in the pump to compensate for any loss of pressure due to the filter and extra length of the oil circuit?
Let us know what think, any feed back is more than welcome.
Cheers
Tony
"Long live the mighty Grey"