Halestorm wrote:When I picked up my SPW kit in Vernon BC Jim Sherwin (founder of SPW) made a point that you only needed to put aluminum tape on the mount to protect it from heat. That’s what went on mine 12 years ago, still looks good.
Did he validate his statement with data or merely make a statement?
It's the air space behind the shields that provide the protection to the underlying substrate (engine mount tubes/finish) in this case. Applying aluminum tape directly on the tube merely transfers the heat through the aluminum by conduction. Aluminum is an excellent heat conductor; this is why cheap cookware is often made from it. Using a shield forces the heat source to resort to convection across the air gap behind the shield, which due to the movement of air from the upper pressure chamber down through the cylinders results in maintaining temperatures of the tubing below critical values. Yes, science is employed in the lowly heat shield.
TR