BoostCreep
FRF Addict
Your McLaren uses a dry sump, the predator in both the R and 500 does not. That’s a significant difference in how the vehicle is able to handle high g forces in cornering. More oil is needed on a wet sump to maintain pressure vs a dry sump.Ford performance claims it's for the angles and offroading. Just passing info.
Let's get back to what you said on stable oil, not true. Fluid dynamics 101- more fluid- more heat soak and that heat takes longer to de rease under a severe load. If you wanted to decrease heat fast then you would want a larger cooler and less oil as possible. Example:
My mclaren 600 only uses 7 quarts and it's a v8. The oil cooler is massive.
I’m not saying the higher capacity does not help in high angle off road conditions, but the higher capacity was also required to keep the pickup submerged in high g load events on track in the 500. Same motor, same capacity. Very different use cases so different pickup and wet sump designs.
The McLaren is also a 3.8L, 27% smaller displacement than the predator, and only 8% larger than the 3.5 EcoBoost, but uses 16% more oil than the 3.5, despite both being DOHC twin turbo motors. So your McLaren uses more oil per liter than the 3.5, so please tell me more about using as little oil as possible to reduce “heat soak.” The thermal mass of the oil is managed by coolers in all the cases we’re talking about so once it’s soaked with heat it’s stable, the higher capacity is needed to keep more stable temps and reduce oil pressure variations under load and g forces.