Have to agree though, 6 posts, all in this thread and most are argumentative, is this what's known as a troll? Or is it someone else registered in a different name
Ah the game is afoot Watson!
Trollage!
Have to agree though, 6 posts, all in this thread and most are argumentative, is this what's known as a troll? Or is it someone else registered in a different name
there is another JKM dyno day in August and I will attend again along with mOrk who will be there with his cupra. he has stage one with sps so we will be able to gauge a much more accurate reading on the power gains between stock, stage 1 and stage 2 IRRISPECTIVE of what the numbers say. it will be about the gains and this is really what myself and Sy are interested in.
Sorry i guess my english are bad, but when u say compressor u mean the actual compressor of the car or the propeller of the turbine? If you are reffering to the actuall compressor then it is disengaged after 3,5k rpm because the mechanical door closes at that point so the air is only coming in from the intake.
If you mention to the turbine how do u estimate the amount of rpm when you do not know the AFR, Advance, Ambient Temperature and so on? Even if you knew how many grams of air i have coming in you still wouldnt be able to give an good estimate of the cars power.
I disagree that the most efficient way to measure power is weight and terminal speed @ 1/4 mile. You do realise the amount of parameters (tyres, suspenions,wind, track). Imagine 2 identical cars, every single setting same apart from one having lets say a gearbox from a diesel car, the difference between these 2 cars would be atleast 3-4cars distance. Would you say the 2nd one has more power or it spreads the same power better and requires at least 1gear change less hence ending up faster.
I guess you are proffesional in tuning, so could you be more specific on what settings you run your remaps, AFR,Advance, Boost pressure, Abs throttle position(all the way to the limiter)
Ah the game is afoot Watson!
Trollage!
Just to clarify, I mean the compressor wheel of the turbocharger. That is the wheel that compresses intake air, and gets its power from the turbine wheel that is rotated by exhaust gasses.
You can think of it as a wing on airflow, where it creates high pressure and low pressure areas. It also has an angle of attack to the intake airflow, and when the angle of attack increases too much, the compressor stalls.
Very basic thing about aerodynamics and wings is that a wing always stalls at the same angle of attack. The angle of attack is dependant of the intake air mass/speed and compressors rotational speed. Thats why turbocharger manufacturers produce compressor maps.
Thats also why there's a limit of how much air a compressor wheel can produce, because eventually it will stall. You can have a very powerful N/A engine where the turbocharger does only harm, because the compressor is fully stalled just by the amount of air inhaled by the engine (well, that would mean you'd have a 12-litre marine diesel and a K03 but just to give you an idea what I mean).
I do not have to "estimate" the rpm, its actually mapped in the ECU by OEM engineers. There is a map in the ECU where its told how fast the turbocharger rotates at certain airflow and engine rpm. To achieve enough airflow to reach 230hp, you're overspeeding the turbine way beyond its original specified rpm range. MED17 ECU's have a surprisingly complicated physics model to control the chargers.
Intake air mass is a very good indication of the produced engine power. It seems you think this the wrong way round. If your AFR is off, your engine wont breath properly and thus gives less air massflow. Same with ignition. On a charged engine, you might end up having alot of boost but not that much airflow. Boost isnt even that important as you should know, mass airflow is what counts, because thats the used amount of air, and more you use air, the more you produce power.
As you know, ignition/AFR control is easy on these cars, power stays almost constant between 11.0-12.5:1, EGT changes by about 50C (still should be less than 950C on WOT run through 4th), ignition has bigger effect on EGT, running less than 14deg at redline starts to increase EGT quickly to over 1000C, and at 6000rpm it wont take 20deg even with 100RON and 11:1 AFR. All these assuming roughly ISA conditions.
About your 1/4 mile comment, you forgot I said trap speed not ET. You can have the same trap speed with 5 car lenghts difference. Try it...
Its sad people think I'm a troll, I can assure you I'm not.
very good blagger
No need to blag, that was just a rough calculation of how unrealistic 230hp is from the standard turbo. There are alot of other variables as well to take into account, but its in the ballpark.
Still have not answered Sy's question mate. Are you a serious tuner and where are you based and what do you do for a living? Personally, you sound like a lecturer to me hehehehehehehhehe
Actually, lets just do some maths.
Lets assume, and I'll round values up a bit just to keep things simple...
Engine capacity is 1400cc.
HP target is 230hp
Max rpm shall be lets say 6500
ISA conditions, intake air temps very low 25C at full sing.
AFR 11.5:1
Lets even make this more easy, lets assume engine VE is 95%, and BSFC is very low 0.55.
Now we calculate airflow to reach 230hp. Formula for that is Wa = Hp*AFR*BSFC/60
Wa = 230 * 11.5 * 0,55/60 = 24,24 lb/min of air. 183 grams per second, so we are a bit optimistic here. Anyway...
Then we calculate the MAP required for that:
map = (Wa * R * (460+Tiat)) / (VE * rpm/2 * Engine capacity in cubic inches, 85,43CI)
R = gas constant, 639,6, Tiat is intake air temp (in F), rpm is rpm, VE = our 95% Volumetric Efficiency.
So we have:
MAP = (24,24 * 639,6 * (460+77)) / (0,95 * 6500/2 * 85,43) = 31,56psi - atmospheric 14,7psi at sea level = 16,9psi = 1,16bar of boost at 6500rpm.
We'll assume VERY low pressure losses to the IC etc, normally standard systems at these airflow levels are 4-5psi, lets say 1psi here, so we need 17,9psi of boost now. Thats 1,23bar.
Now we just have to calculate the pressure ratio, which is output psi/intake psi, 31,56/14,7 = pressure ratio of 2,14. Didnt calculate any intake losses, usually they are about to 1psi with a good cold air intake kit.
So, plotting this pressure ratio and airflow on the compressor map (which unfortunately usually arent public...), but try it on an old K03 compressor map, and you'll see we are so beyond its capabilities its almost insane.
This is how these things actually are calculated, unfortunately I dont have the exact VE and BSFC for this engine, but based on that air mass, we're not too far off.
I am very happy the conversation is going this way, I have to admit that this is going beyond my knowledge and i dont want to look like an idiot pretending i know everything, i will discuss this with my mechanic today and i ll get back to you. Thanx for bothering writing all of the above!
I never meant you sounded like a lecturer in a negative way mate, so please don't misunderstand my statement. It was merely meant in the way you describe everything with all the figures etc, would be like a lecturer did in a lecture hall (not that I have ever been to a lecture). So what about this other machine they use to check power where the wheel is taken off the car. Have no idea what it's called but some one was talking about it at the beginning of the thread I think.