From the Dr AE Haas Lesson 201:
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Cold engine showing very high pressures because of the thickened oil at startup:
For a 40 wt oil at 75 F at startup:
The oil is thicker, has more internal resistance and therefore requires more pressure to get the same flow.
RPM....Pressure..Flow
1,000......60 PSI....1
2,000....120 PSI....2 The maximum flow because of the oil pop off valve at 90 PSI will be 1.5
4,000....240 PSI....4
8,000....480 PSI....8
At 1,500 RPM you reach the maximum oil flow rate and if you run to 8,000 RPM it is the same rate. The flow cannot increase and it is insufficient. This is why we must wait until our oil temperature comes up to 212 F or higher. The maximum flow rate in this case will then double, up to 3.
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These articles are great and detailed, so everybody interested should read them in their entirety (thanks again Dr H and jdub). Taking one cut & paste out doesn't do them justice, but the quoted excerpt above seems to explain the possible school of thought of the Canton designers. Pressure doesn't help if it is high from cooler oil with low flow and there is inadequate lubrication. We want warmer oil for top flow (therefore lubrication). So we want to get to maximum flow ASAP and this appears to be about 212F in testing.
I want to be confident in the 215F thermostat before I install it. I think I'm feeling OK about it so far. Dr AE Haas did state that his temperature runs 180F in normal operation but didn't state what thermostat he uses. It could open at 215F and cool the oil to 180F through the lube cycle. It depends on where it is measured and where the cooler is placed for a given engine (ie his Ferrari).
Keep any thoughts coming.