The oil pressure relief valve is on the oil pump. It's a little stem that sticks down on the front part of the pump. Has an internal snap ring inside that secures the relief spring and piston.
Most all oil filters have relief/bypass valves that allow oil to bypass a clogged filter element, or to allow
very cold oil to bypass the filter.
If you're running the stock oil cooler, there is also a spring-loaded viscosity bypass in the cooler stem which alllows cold oil to bypass the cooler, as this can create an over-pressure condition in the cooler.
Ernie, weren't you running a dual remote oil filter on 3/8" I.D. lines??? :brainfart::
Seriously, the SHO oil pump can flow near 12 gallons per minute. You can barely get 12 GPM through a 5/8" garden hose. 3/8" is sending disaster an engraved invitation.
If you're going to continue racing in the current venue, you need to start thinking differently. I believe you have two options.
1. Blueprint the block oiling passages, then dry sump the engine oiling system. Fabricate a new shallow oil pan, use several scavenge stages, use a remote oil reservoir and de-aereator, the use at least one pressurization stage to lubricate the engine. This is going to cost several thousand $ by the time you're done.
2. If you want to keep the wet sump, here are some suggestions.
- Blueprint the block oiling passages.
- Ditch the stock oil cooler, if you haven't already.
- Plumb a dual/parallel remote oil filter on nothing less than -10 lines, better yet, use -12.
- Use a front mount, flat-plate oil cooler, you can probably operate without a thermostatic bypass, as it adds restriction that you don't need.
- Every engine block remote oil takeoff I've seen needs help. Port and smooth all the passages, round over sharp edges, use O-ring style AN port fittings with internal tapers to smooth the flow.
- Same thing goes for the remote oil filter block: Port and smooth all the internal passages.
- Use good high-flow oil filters, Mobil 1 M1-301, don't use that Fram junk.
Option 2 won't cost as much as dry sumping, but figure over $500 to buy good, high-flow oiling components and all those petty red and blue fittings.
This is my plumbing nightmare. Oil cooler's in the middle, trans cooler is on the right, engine oil thermostatic bypass is below the trans cooler. This arrangement kept a 3.2L supercharged engine at 215F water and 225F oil running Willow Springs big track at 92F ambient for 20 minutes at a time. If only my clutch had worked as well as my cooling systems...
Click image to enlarge.
