Those 90* fittings are HORRIBLE at fluid flow. They are a significant restriction in its self even if the inside was the correct diameter.
I'm not going to outright state that that is false, because a better design surely would be "better", but I'm not sure that you'd even be able to quantify it.
The sharp right-angle port inside the bellhousing leading to the cooler fittings is the exact same 0.460" diameter as these fittings. So these fittings aren't any worse than what the fluid is already flowing through. Not ideal, but not worse.
Whats really sad is that there is a large sector of our hobby who will buy that and think its the best thing since sliced bread, clamped fittings and all.
Those 90s look like painted brass plumbing fittings....not good for high pressure fluid flow. I personally would not run it.
The fittings are billet aluminium, anodized black. I work with / in a machine shop making random, custom parts like this, and can tell you: they are extremely well-made pieces.
The hose clamps are of fairly low quality, which is a disappointment, but I expected that going in before I bought mine; legit, high-quality worm-screw hose clamps are very difficult to come by. $20 worth of t-bolt clamps fixes the issue.
And I'm not concerned in the least of a properly t-bolted connection leaking or blowing off; I've had several fluid engineers (not from the company selling this product), as well as a couple prominent transmission builders, tell me that they see no issue with a properly clamped hose bead connection at these pressures. Beaded fittings like this, that you can purchase anywhere, are usually rated to at least 300 psi, and that's with a pretty healthy safety factor. Time may prove me wrong, but I'm not very concerned about it right now.
As mentioned above, the fittings are certainly not "ideal" for fluid flow, but they're not any worse than what the oil is already going through in the bellhousing. (And if I think about it, I need to check the separator plate and where the fluid is coming from, before heading to the cooler, to see if there's any further restrictions there.)
I bought the cooler knowing that I was deviating from the known "standard" product (the Mike L. cooler), but I'm an entrepreneurial type of guy, and thought I'd like to try a new product and see how it performs. The overall design didn't seem bad to me, and now that I've got the parts in my hands, the actual build quality is pretty decent (minus the hose clamps). Combined with a nice pre-sale discount, I thought I'd give it a whirl and see how it turns out.