Wow, "Bewy", not enough personal integrity to post under his own name. Just one of those persons that hangs out at websites and causes trouble for those that are actually helping.
Now, oil vs epoxy, lets take a closer look.
"Bewy" has stated, or, copy and pasted that epoxy coils run more heat transfer out of the core windings than oil filled coils. Very interesting. Now, lets stop the copy and paste idiocy, and take a "hands on" look, shall we.
First to know, epoxy is not a heat leaching mixture, unless you are on the Space Shuttle. Only ONE epoxy blend has a 2.0 percent heat transfer rate. There are coil manufacturers that state they have heat leaching epoxy ijn thier coils. Realize 5that the Space Shuttle epoxy was only used in ONE application, and cost a paltry 100K PER OUNCE. So, the next time "Bewy" tells you that the $20.00 epoxy filled coil has that same epoxy in it, realize that the coil should actually cost much more than 20 bucks, and...doesn't.
Ever see a heat plate under a carb, designed to keep heat in the manifold, NOT the carb? Well, it IS NOT OIL, IT IS EPOXY. This makes the manifold metal heat travel back into the manifold, NOT the carb.
Then, we have coils, oil filled, and epoxy.
Anyone ever tough a coil that was running on an engine, to see how hot it was? I'd bet that when you did this, the oil filled coil was considerably hotter than the epoxy filled coil.
Oh, Dave, you are lying to all of us. Not if you have ever temp tested a running coil with your hand. WHY? As stated, epoxy does not leach heat, it encapsulates it, into itself. And, as we are all aware, the heat created inside a coil is done from the windings, which are centered in the coil body. Epoxy fills and insulates the windings, and the coil body feels cooler to the touch. Now, oil, those coils feel so hot to the touch, why????? Well, ever hear of "Thermo-Siphoning"? Well that was done to engines beflre water pumps were in play. It is the engine heating the cooling media, to a boil, then, rising the coolant up into the top of the radiator, down the core, cooling, then, drawn back into the engine to do it all over again. THAT is what an oil filled coil does, thermo-siphon, and the reason those oil filled coils feel so hot to the touch, they are removing heat from the core windings to the body.
One fact, GM large coil in cap HEI, ever see posts about the HEI modules being junk, "failed for no reason"? HEI modules NEVER 'fail for no reason". 99.75 percent of continuing HEI module failures are caused by the in capo epoxy filled coils overheating their internal windings, progressively. As the coils get worse, they still work, but put more load on the modules, to module failure. The fix that stops module failures is changing the in cap coil, or, a better option, change the coil out of the cap, to an oil filled round coil next to the distributor. Proven fact, this stops module failures and coil failures in their tracks. Ever wonder just why large HEI's had oil filled coils, when everything else GM used oil filled round coils? Well, it was safety. Oil is combustible, burns, can explode. So, a coil with a delivery terminal, in the top of the cap, under the rotor, with a clear path down the carbon button, to the area the rotor is in, onto the rotor, then, flung out to the spark gap between rotor tip and cap terminal, BOOM, explosion under the cap, or, worse, blow the cap apart, burn down the whole car. Later HEI's used a remote mounted epoxy coil, doesn't have the possibility of a nuclear blast under the hood.
Also, I was "removed" from a couple of web sites, by people like "Bewy", they just didn't like opposition to my facts and truth. Notice that I am not now, prohibited from posting from am=ny website, and in fact, those two sites asked me back when they found out the other person(s) weren't as honest as they purported to be.
So, I will leave it, and here at that, go do the hand tests on your own, make your own findings, and, decisions, which is something "Bewy" really doesn't want you to do, it'll ruin his whole day, and act.
Get the facts for yourselves, not "Bewy" copy and paste.