Oil Coolers

Oil Coolers

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    Mishimoto 11-19 Ford 6.7L Powerstroke Performance Oil Cooler Kit - Black - MMOC-F2D-11KBK

    Mishimoto

    MSRP: $1,320.00
    $1,199.95
    When should I consider upgrading my Ford Super Duty's oil cooler?Consider upgrading your Ford Super Duty's oil cooler when engaging in heavy towing or performance driving to prevent thermal breakdown and ensure sustained engine performance.What is the...
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    $1,199.95
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    do88 07-13 BMW M3 (E90/E92/E93) DKG/DCT Oil Cooler - OC-110

    do88

    $1,299.87
    How does the do88 Oil Cooler improve engine longevity?This oil cooler maximizes engine longevity by maintaining optimal oil temperatures, preventing heat-induced degradation under extreme driving conditions.What is the installation process for the do88...
    $1,299.87
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    PERRIN 15-26 Subaru WRX Oil Cooler Full Kit (Top Mounted Requires Strut Brace) - PSP-OIL-151

    Perrin Performance

    $999.60
    Do I need to confirm fitment for my vehicle before purchasing this oil cooler kit?Yes, confirming specific vehicle fitment is essential for proper installation and optimal performance of this oil cooler kit.Is this oil cooler kit easy to...
    $999.60
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    Mishimoto 15-20 BMW F80 M3/M4 Oil Cooler Kit - MMOC-F80-15K

    Mishimoto

    $978.95
    Will this oil cooler fit my BMW?Confirm fitment with your vehicle using our online tool to ensure optimal integration and performance for your specific BMW model.How difficult is installation?Professional installation is recommended for this oil cooler...
    $978.95
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    Mishimoto 11-19 Ford 6.7L Powerstroke Performance Oil Cooler Kit - Silver - MMOC-F2D-11KSL

    Mishimoto

    MSRP: $1,320.00
    $1,199.95
    Will this oil cooler fit my 2011-2019 Ford F-250 Super Duty?This Mishimoto oil cooler kit is engineered specifically to fit 2011 through 2019 Ford F-250 and F-350 Super Duty models.What is the installation process like for this oil cooler?Professional...
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    CSF 65-73 Porsche 911 / 74-89 Porsche 911/930 Turbo Engine Oil Cooler - 8242

    CSF

    $995.00
    What is the main benefit of upgrading to a CSF Oil Cooler?CSF Oil Coolers deliver 50% greater flow capacity over the OEM connection, ensuring consistent engine performance under extreme conditions for Porsche 911/930.How does the design of the CSF Oil...
    $995.00
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An oil cooler is a dedicated heat exchanger that removes thermal energy from engine or transmission oil before it degrades viscosity, accelerates wear, and causes catastrophic failure under sustained load — making it one of the most effective and underrated reliability upgrades available. Motor Sport Mayhem stocks 159 oil coolers across 45 brands, ranging from entry-level thermostatic fittings to full race-spec plate-and-fin systems engineered for continuous high-RPM and heavy-tow duty cycles.

Our Top Picks for Oil Coolers

Every product below was hand-selected by our engineering team based on demonstrated thermal performance, build quality, and real-world results across street, track, and competition applications.

AER Coolant Pumps

Aeromotive | $375.55

A high-flow electric coolant pump delivering 27 GPM with a universal remote-mount design that pairs directly with auxiliary oil cooling circuits.

  • Brushed motor construction with 3/4 NPT inlet/outlet handles sustained flow demands without pressure drop across extended race sessions

aFe BladeRunner GT Series Radiator

aFe | $1,268.00

A bar-and-plate radiator constructed from high-density aluminum core material with integrated hose kit for a complete thermal management upgrade.

  • GT Series bar-and-plate construction delivers significantly higher thermal transfer efficiency versus OEM tube-and-fin designs under sustained load

AMS Expansion Tanks

AMS | $449.95

An auxiliary intercooler tank engineered by AMS Performance to expand coolant system capacity and stabilize inlet temperatures on forced-induction applications.

  • Increased reservoir volume delays thermal soak on water-to-air intercooler circuits, directly protecting oil temps under back-to-back pulls

Anderson Composites Cooling Plates

Anderson Composites | $539.10

A carbon fiber radiator cover that directs airflow precisely through the cooling stack while eliminating recirculation of hot underhood air.

  • Proper air sealing around the core can reduce coolant and oil temps measurably, making this a structural complement to any cooler upgrade

AWE Tuning ColdFront Heat Exchanger

AWE Tuning | $995.00

A precision-engineered heat exchanger designed to dramatically lower charge coolant temperatures, directly reducing heat rejection load on the primary oil cooling system.

  • Reduced system-wide thermal load means engine oil stays within safe viscosity range longer under boost on track or spirited street driving

BD Diesel Xtruded Double-Stack Trans Cooler

BD Diesel | $999.95

A double-stacked extruded transmission cooler kit with 1/2-inch tubing that delivers maximum ATF thermal capacity for high-demand towing and diesel performance applications.

  • Double-stacked core design doubles the effective heat exchange surface area without requiring a larger footprint in the front fascia

BLOX Racing 2-Row Radiator

BLOX Racing | $180.00

A 2-row aluminum radiator built as an OEM-location replacement that improves heat dissipation over the factory unit at a budget-accessible price point.

  • All-aluminum core and tank construction resists the cracking and leak points that plague OEM plastic end-tank radiators over time

BMR Suspension Radiator Support

BMR Suspension | $199.95

A tubular steel radiator support that replaces the OEM stamped unit while adding a sway bar mount for a dual-function structural upgrade.

  • Rigid radiator support prevents core flex and vibration-induced leak failures that are common after track use with heavy cooling systems installed

Bosch Electric Water Pump

Bosch | $226.46

A 50W OE-equivalent electric water pump that maintains consistent coolant flow independent of engine RPM, keeping oil cooler circuits operating at peak efficiency.

  • Electric actuation eliminates the low-RPM flow deficit of mechanical pumps, ensuring the oil cooler circuit receives adequate flow during slow-speed crawls and idle

COBB Carbon Fiber Radiator Shroud

COBB | $435.00

A carbon fiber radiator shroud that seals underhood airflow paths to eliminate hot air recirculation and improve cooling stack efficiency on high-output turbocharged applications.

  • Precision-fit carbon construction is lighter than OEM plastic shrouds while providing better sealing geometry around the radiator and oil cooler cores

How to Choose the Right Oil Cooler

The single most important decision in oil cooler selection is matching core capacity to your actual heat rejection requirement — not just picking the largest unit that fits. An undersized cooler allows oil to stay above safe operating temperature under sustained load; an oversized cooler on a stock street car will over-cool oil in cold weather, increasing viscosity drag and wear during warmup. Core type, row count, fin density, thermostat integration, and mounting configuration all contribute to where a given cooler belongs on that spectrum.

Key Specifications

Core Construction: Bar-and-plate cores are the benchmark for motorsport and heavy-duty applications because the brazed aluminum construction withstands vibration, pressure spikes, and thermal cycling without deforming. Tube-and-fin cores are lighter and adequate for mild street use but are more susceptible to core damage and leak failure under hard use. For any tracked vehicle, tow rig under load, or high-output engine build, bar-and-plate is the correct choice — the weight and cost difference is justified by durability alone.

Row Count and Core Thickness: More rows increase surface area and dwell time, improving heat extraction — but also increase pressure drop across the circuit. A single-row cooler suits a lightly modified street engine that runs near stock oil temperatures. Two- and three-row units are appropriate for modified street or occasional track use. Full-competition applications typically run dedicated stacked-plate oil coolers with thermostatic sandwich plates to bypass the cooler until oil reaches optimal operating temperature, preventing over-cooling on cold laps.

Thermostatic Control: Any oil cooler installation that will see mixed street and track use should include a thermostat — either a sandwich plate thermostat at the filter or an inline thermostatic bypass. Without it, the cooler is active at all times, which delays warmup, increases wear, and causes condensation buildup in cold climates. Most quality thermostatic sandwich plates open between 180°F and 195°F, which is the correct range to balance warmup speed against thermal protection.

Line and Fitting Sizing: Oil cooler line diameter directly affects flow rate and pressure drop. AN-10 (5/8" ID) lines are the minimum for most engine oil cooling circuits on performance applications; AN-8 is borderline acceptable for light-duty use only. Transmission cooler lines should be sized to the transmission manufacturer's specification — undersized lines create backpressure that can damage the transmission's internal oil pump. Quality stainless-braided lines with proper swaged fittings are worth the investment over push-lock assemblies on any build that will see elevated temperatures. For fabrication needs including line fittings and adapters, see our Fittings section.

Oil Cooler Core Sizing Reference by Application

Application TypeRecommended Core RowsMinimum Core AreaThermostat Required
Lightly modified street (up to 50 HP over stock)1–2 row15–25 sq inRecommended
Modified street / weekend track (50–150 HP over stock)2–3 row25–40 sq inRequired
Dedicated track / autocross (150–300 HP over stock)3–4 row or stacked plate40–65 sq inRequired
Full race / sustained competitionStacked plate, 19–25 row65–100+ sq inRequired (race thermostat)
Heavy tow / diesel (transmission oil)Double-stacked plate50–80 sq inRecommended
High-output forced induction (engine oil)3-row bar-and-plate minimum50–80 sq inRequired

Price Guide

Entry ($1.38–$150): This tier covers thermostatic sandwich plate adapters, basic fitting kits, transmission cooler lines, and small tube-and-fin cooler cores. These are legitimate starting points for mild street builds or for adding a factory-spec transmission cooler to a vehicle that left the factory without one. Expect adequate quality for light-duty use — these are not track parts.

Mid-range ($150–$600): The majority of enthusiasts will find their solution here. This range covers quality 2- and 3-row aluminum oil coolers with thermostatic control, complete transmission cooler kits with AN-line hardware, and entry-level stacked-plate systems from established brands. Build quality steps up noticeably — brazed cores, proper AN fittings, and application-specific mounting hardware replace the generic hardware of the entry tier.

Premium ($600–$2,390.00): Full race-spec oil cooler systems, large-capacity double-stacked transmission coolers for diesel and heavy-tow duty, complete cooling system overhauls with electric pump integration, and brand-specific engineered kits for high-output platforms. These products are appropriate for dedicated competition vehicles, diesel trucks under sustained towing load, and high-horsepower builds where oil temperature management is a tuning variable rather than just a reliability measure.

Who Is This For?

Oil coolers serve an unusually wide range of applications — from a diesel owner preventing automatic transmission failure on a mountain pass to a circuit racer managing oil temperatures across 30-minute sessions — and the usage data reflects that breadth accurately.

Track / Autocross — 8.2/10

This is the highest-scoring use case and the most technically demanding application for oil coolers. Sustained high-RPM operation on circuit eliminates the natural cooling effect of varied throttle inputs that street driving provides, and oil temperatures climb continuously until they reach a thermal equilibrium — which on a stock or mildly modified car may be well above the 250°F threshold where most conventional motor oils begin to thin dangerously. A properly sized oil cooler with thermostatic control is not a performance upgrade in this context — it is a prerequisite for engine survival across multiple sessions.

Racing Competition — 8.2/10

Competition-level scoring ties with track/autocross because the physics are identical but the consequences of failure are more immediate. Race classes with technical regulations often mandate oil cooler specifications, and scrutineers check line routing and catch-can compliance. At this level, the entire oil thermal management system — cooler, thermostat, lines, fittings, and oil specification — needs to function as an integrated system rather than individual bolt-on components.

Heavy Towing — 8.2/10

Transmission oil temperature is the primary failure mechanism in automatic transmissions used for sustained heavy towing, and this use case scores identically to competition applications for good reason. ATF degradation begins aggressively above 220°F, and OEM transmission coolers are sized for intermittent light towing rather than sustained grades at maximum GCWR. A proper aftermarket transmission cooler is one of the most cost-effective reliability upgrades available for any diesel or gas truck used for regular trailer work. This ties directly into drivetrain longevity for working trucks.

Street Performance — 7.8/10

Street performance is where most buyers enter the oil cooler category, typically after a tune, forced induction addition, or a track day that revealed climbing oil temps. The 7.8/10 score reflects genuine utility — even street-driven modified vehicles benefit from an oil cooler once power output exceeds OEM specifications, particularly during summer heat or spirited canyon driving. The key for street applications is thermostatic control to prevent over-cooling during cold starts and daily commuting.

Easy DIY Install — 7.8/10

A 7.8/10 for DIY install reflects the reality that most quality oil cooler kits are genuinely achievable for a competent home builder with basic hand tools and an AN line assembly kit — sandwich plate installation is particularly straightforward. The score is not a perfect 10 because line routing, clearancing around moving components, and proper fitting torque require attention to detail that catches out inexperienced installers. Following torque specifications on AN fittings and allowing adequate clearance to exhaust components is non-negotiable for a leak-free, safe installation.

Trusted Oil Cooler Brands We Carry

The brands that lead this category earn their position through engineering depth, not marketing. Mishimoto has built its reputation on comprehensive application coverage with all-aluminum core construction and pressure-tested quality control that meets or exceeds OEM fitment tolerances across a huge range of platforms. CSF approaches thermal management as a systems engineering problem — their cores use proprietary fin geometry and high-density brazed construction that outperforms generic designs in back-to-back testing. Koyo brings decades of OEM thermal management supply experience to the aftermarket, with tube construction tolerances that reflect their original equipment heritage. BD Diesel owns the heavy-duty transmission cooling segment with extruded core designs specifically validated under sustained diesel towing loads. Wehrli Custom Fabrication produces fabricated cooling components to custom-shop standards with production-line consistency, particularly strong in the diesel performance space. For complete cooling system builds where oil cooler integration meets radiator, expansion tank, and pump selection, brands like Perrin Performance and Vibrant round out a full system solution with AN hardware and fabricated components engineered to work together.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are aftermarket radiators any good?

Quality aftermarket radiators from established manufacturers are not only as good as OEM — they are frequently superior in thermal capacity and durability. OEM radiators are cost-optimized for the production line, which means plastic end tanks crimped to aluminum cores that eventually crack at the seam from thermal cycling and vibration. Aftermarket all-aluminum units with brazed construction eliminate that failure point entirely and typically offer 25–40% more core volume than the factory unit. The key is buying from a manufacturer with documented core construction standards — not a no-name import with unverified wall thicknesses and untested pressure ratings.

Are aftermarket transmission coolers worth it?

For any vehicle used for sustained towing, performance driving, or operation in high ambient temperatures, an aftermarket transmission cooler is one of the highest-value reliability upgrades available. Automatic transmission fluid degrades exponentially above 220°F — fluid life is cut roughly in half for every 20°F above that threshold. OEM coolers integrated into the radiator end tank are a known weak point because they share coolant temperature as a lower bound, meaning ATF can never cool below engine coolant temperature. A standalone aftermarket cooler mounted in the airstream breaks that thermal coupling and can drop ATF temperatures 30–50°F under load. The cost of a quality transmission cooler is a fraction of a transmission rebuild.

Are aftermarket water pumps as good as OEM?

OEM-equivalent electric water pumps from Tier 1 automotive suppliers like Bosch are manufactured to the same specifications as the original equipment — in many cases they are built by the same supplier. The critical variable is whether the aftermarket pump matches the OEM flow rate, pressure rating, and control protocol, since many modern vehicles use electronically modulated pump speed that interacts with the engine management system. Generic aftermarket mechanical pumps vary widely in impeller quality and seal materials; cheaper castings with plastic impellers are a false economy. For any build where the cooling system is being upgraded — including adding an auxiliary oil cooler circuit — an electric pump that can maintain consistent flow independent of engine RPM is worth the investment.

Are aluminum coolant tanks better than plastic?

In virtually every performance and durability metric, aluminum coolant reservoirs outperform plastic OEM units. Plastic tanks develop micro-cracks from repeated thermal cycling, become brittle with age and heat exposure, and can fail catastrophically under pressure at elevated temperatures — exactly the conditions that matter most. Aluminum tanks maintain structural integrity across the full operating temperature range, handle higher system pressures without deformation, and do not degrade chemically from contact with modern coolant additives. For a street car with a modified engine running higher coolant temps, or any tracked vehicle, an aluminum reservoir is a straightforward reliability upgrade that eliminates a known failure point.

Are aftermarket radiator hoses worth it?

Silicone radiator hoses are unambiguously worth it for any modified, tracked, or high-mileage vehicle. OEM rubber hoses harden, crack, and collapse under high vacuum at sustained operating temperatures — a collapsed lower hose at high RPM can cause a cavitation event that starves the water pump and triggers overheating within minutes. Silicone hoses maintain their shape and flexibility across a temperature range from -65°F to 350°F, resist all common coolant chemistries, and do not degrade from ozone or underhood heat exposure the way rubber does. The wall thickness of quality silicone hoses also provides superior burst pressure resistance, which matters on any system running higher-than-stock coolant pressure. For the full cooling system picture, hoses are the last component to upgrade but among the most cost-effective for long-term reliability.

Building something specific? Our performance specialists can help you select the right Oil Coolers for your application — street, track, or full race build.