Ok...

its about Engines and their cooling systems...Radial engines used the air flow crossing the banks of cylinders as coolant. Some of them needed more assistance (Fw190s had a cowling fan that increased the airflow in the engine)...
In the Inline engine ,the coolant is a liquid (in first versions was water in later Glycol), that takes the heat from the engine, then is pumped to the Radiators where the air flow cools the coolant, then it returns to the engine and so on...
so far so good ok.
BUT...I guess that the coolant system needed something to pump it...where is that placed in the aircraft?...did any plane on WWII use the natural convection to make the coolant flow?.
In other order of things, in AH when the radiator is hit I suppose it means ANY part of the liquid-cooling system..am I right? if not, will it be introduced?...
I live with the sensation that the minor damage to an inline engine would suppose immediate cooling-leak. I dont see that many coolant leaks in AH, thats why I ask

Also I noticed that when the radiator is hit, the Temperature gauge doesnt shot an increase,when it should go out of scales. Same with oil leaks...oil pressure always is the same ,with oil leaks or without them.
Would be helpful to see them working to have a notion on how much will your engine be alive before stopping

thanks in advance for the input