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This must be another theory that doesn't apply and can't be taught in Kansas school.:eek: |
An engine is basically a pump, but the the air behave the same if you move it by droping the pressure on one side, or raising it on the other.
There is no such thing as vacuum, it's just a difference of pressure and that is what move the air, a fluid is never "sucked" it is always pushed from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure. |
Air and water are Newtonian Fluids. A Newtonian fluid is any fluid that follow the same characteristics as a solid. Flow and velocity are base on friction and static attraction or a coefficient of viscosity. The calculations say ignore a negative number such as pressure because the value are squared so a negative pressure times itself is a positive value.
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"A third factor in manifold vacuum is engine compression. If an engine has low compression in all cylinders, it creates a steady, but low, manifold vacuum. If an engine has low compression in one cylinder, manifold vacuum will be low only during that cylinders intake stroke. This will be observed as a gauge that fluctuates or quickly changes reading. Low compression in a cylinder can be caused by leaking valves or rings, leaking head gaskets, or other ways that keep the cylinder from sealing during the compression stroke." Compression and Vacuum Quote:
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I give up
Believe what you want. Sarcasm Republican legislator from Missouri, offered a bill last month that would allow parents to pull their children out of high-school biology classes lest they be exposed to the concept of natural selection. Nearly 90 years since the public trial of John Scopes, a young schoolmaster accused of teaching evolution to Tennessee children, Missouri’s House Bill no. 1472 The earth is flat and Einstein was all wet |
I can see a wedge helping where you have the airflow motive force being dominated by constant "push" forces as would be present from a turbo or supercharger. The reason being that side to side pulses or draw into the engine from left to right, right to left plenums are fed positively from the turbo or super charge. The side to side pulse is not disrupted by the wedge.
When we consider NA there will pulses from plenum to plenum as the engine draws air in. This will be interrupted by the wedge. There is no positive charge to help feed this need. Have a look at the IPD wedge. In many iterations you will see holes, relief features which I believe is a feature intended to mitigate this NA flow issue. NA engines: wedge value is questionable Boosted engines: wedge could help cylinder filling > as always testing is needed to know |
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I'm not a scientist, maybe I shouldn't comment on anything since I'm not. I'm just trying to help out. All I know is the simulation of the air flow through the Distribution T is not like putting a leaf blower in the end of the Distribution T and blowing air at it. There seems to be a difference in what our engine is doing with the air and what the leaf blower is doing with the air. Maybe you can clear this up? Is the simulation incorrect? Help out if you know, throwing jabs at me doesn't help anyone. |
As an engineer, it's entertaining to watch the other engineers try to explain technical principles to non technical folks. Without a technical education folks will believe what they want to believe (suction is a great example). At some point you just have to say, "I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you."
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From the simulation. "The volume flow rate results show that the T and T with wedge have almost identical flow rates." Yet Pedro's video shows the opposite. Quote:
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I'll try a different way.
Have you ever gone fishing in a trout stream and watched a bend in the stream with a back eddy. The water spins backward and slows as it gets away from the current the speed up as it comes back around. A portion of the stream flows back continuously. It really obvious if there is a can or foam cup floating in it. That is what happens in the long radius flat back Porsche Plenum. Now imagine the same stream and same bend if someone built a concrete barrier in the outside radius. The water would glide past at a faster speed or equal to the rest of the stream current. The IPD and or Pedro's Plenum. Pedro's video is a bit of truth a bit of exaggeration. It exploits the defect in the stock plenum. The dead space becomes larger as the velocity of air is increased it is a principle in air flow called a "Boundary air layer". "Turbulent boundary air" is proportional to the air velocity so the turbulent area increases as the air velocity increase. Pedro uses a vacuum to blow air in the plenum which creates a higher velocity than the NA motor can produce but it is fast enough to exaggerate the flow problem. I've been trying to explain all day that turbulent air is like a plug reducing flow. The second type of boundary air layer is "Laminar Boundary air" its the drag created from the air friction with surface of the pipe. This is proportional to the square root of the velocity so it increases slowly as the velocity increases so it has little effect in the application. The big thing you see this affect is golf balls put dimples in the surface you can defeat the effect. Pedro uses a Teflon insert which has a low friction coefficient. IPD used of epoxy coat them but now the shot peen the inside so it like the dimples on a golf ball either way they negate the effect at the air flow speeds for the application |
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I know people like to refer to detached flow as "turbulence", but it's really not accurate (It's one of those things that annoys a fluids engineer). In reality, most flow through the engine is turbulent, which means that the air particles within the freestream is not generally taking a linear path. There is more energy in a turbulent flow, which helps keep the freestream attached to a surface. This is why they make airflow turbulent at the leading edges of airplane wings with little triangles and golf balls have dimples. |
Wow, you haven't posted here in over a year blue2000s. Thanks for the explanation. So what is it about the radius that makes it flow 30% better? Does the larger radius give the air more room to move inside the Distribution T because it's already making it's own natural wedge which would reduce the area for the air to flow?
Yeah, me thinking the engine was making the air pull to the radius looks really stupid, well at least to you guys lol. I never thought about the air creating it's own wedge and I'm trying to figure out why this air is following the path it does in your simulations. Also what about the 997 T being so much larger then the Plenum opening? Is this a huge issue? |
[QUOTE=KRAM36;451898]I don't see where you explained anything? Try me, I'm not afraid to learn.
QUOTE] Wanting to learn is good! As B2000 pointed out we are discussing fluid flow which brings us to Navier-Stokes. Many years ago I had the pleasure of learning fluid dynamics and aerodynamics which just wouldn't be the same without the good old Navier-Stokes equations. The material isn't completely transparent, so I've included this wiki link to get you started. You'll want to brush up on tensors to get the full impact. Here's the link: Navier Now don't say I haven't tried to explain anything to you. |
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Air moves by means of a difference in pressure. That's the "voltage". It doesn't matter (mostly) if it's being driven by above atmospheric to atmospheric or atmospheric to below atmospheric. If the difference in pressure is the same, the air would act the same, again mostly. Moving air has momentum but it's motion is also subject to the pressure (force) acting on it. As air goes around a corner, the air at the inner side of the corner is accelerated more than that at the outer side. This sets up a pressure difference where the air at the outside pushes on the air at the inside which helps the airflow make a smooth turn around the bend despite the air's momentum trying to push it all straight against the outside of the wall. There is a point where the effect of the momentum overcomes the pressure difference and the air with the highest momentum (inside of the turn) pulls away from the wall and heads toward the back of the turn. This is called flow separation, you can see it in my CFD pictures. Separation effectively shrinks the size of the tube that the air is flowing through as the air is ignoring the inside of the turn and really only flowing through some % if the tube. The rest is stagnant air. The more smooth and large the inner turn, the lower the momentum at the inner wall, and the more likely the airflow at the inner wall is to stay attached. This is why the shape of the inside of a turn has so much more influence on the airflow than the outer. There is some speed threshold at any turn where the flow at the inner wall will detach. That speed depends on the geometry and roughness of the walls. The goal is to design that inner turn so that the threshold is above any speed that the engine will produce. |
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