zumbooruk
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Grok says:Interesting... Does anyone know if the variable oil pump programming is different also on the Type R with those other countries recommending 5w-30 vs 0w-02?
The Honda Civic Type R FL5 employs the K20C1 engine, which utilizes a fixed positive displacement gerotor-type oil pump. This pump is mechanically driven by the crankshaft, with its rotational speed directly proportional to engine revolutions per minute. It does not incorporate variable speed functionality, as there is no independent control mechanism such as electric drive to decouple pump speed from engine speed. Nor does it feature variable displacement, which would allow adjustment of the volume pumped per revolution based on engine demand to optimize efficiency or pressure.
Because the pump is fixed displacement, oil flow increases linearly with engine speed, potentially leading to excess pressure at high revolutions per minute, which is managed through a relief valve rather than variable output. Hypotheses such as "if the pump were variable, aftermarket modifications for high flow would be less emphasized" align with observed market offerings, where ported pumps address limitations in sustained high-speed operation without implying stock variability.
The absence of variable features may stem from design priorities favoring simplicity and reliability in a high-performance turbocharged application, where consistent pressure is achieved via a two-stepped relief spring. This mechanism regulates pressure by partially and then fully opening to bypass excess oil, stabilizing output above approximately 3000 to 4000 revolutions per minute, but it does not alter displacement or speed.
The oil pump's operation remains isolated from other engine systems like variable valve timing, which adjusts cam phasing independently. Realistic thinking grounds this in empirical data from service discussions and engineering analyses, showing no evidence of variability.
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