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#11
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![]() "cmyr" wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 11:32?am, George wrote: I believe that Ballenger Headers had the "pickle" located in the collector of 4 tube equal length headers and there was also the "coanda" effect which is specifically what I think you were speaking of. ? It was used experimentally in a truly weird exhaust setup in the early days by of one of the major racing teams back in the mid 60s, but my memory is a bit foggy for specifics that far back, such as who or on what car, sorry. cmyr wrote: ? ?Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You remembered the word I couldn't put my finger on........coanda --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Back in the 70s or so, there was a three cylinder two stroke radial, with all three cylinders in a common crank case - that used the exhaust system exclusively for scavenging the engine. There was no intake draft without it. It was featured on an ultralight one year at OSH. |
#12
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"cmyr" wrote in message
... Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. There have been a number of things that improved VE: Generally, higher compression ratios help especially at higher RPM, roller tappets seem to withstand much faster ramp angles and can stay open further during the open part of the valve cycles, and anti-reversion cones in the exhaust are said to work very well in the mid-range of RPM for any given four cycle engine. In addition, intake and exhaust port shapes play a major role; as do other aspects of head ad piston crown design. In a nut-shell, there has been a lot of progress over the past three quarters of a century, and the only place that I can think of in which aircraft engines have led the way has been in the area that we used to call "blue printing" in which the ports are more carefully caste, machined, and finished to closely match the design drawings for the engine. Today, every late model engine that I have seen is done that way at the factory; but forty years ago, automotive engines were really crude. Peter |
#13
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On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 07:40:10 -0700 (PDT), cmyr
wrote: Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. The anti reversion cone was a dirty fix for a crappy header design. Better than a manifold, but not as good as a proper "tuned" header. |
#14
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On Jun 11, 8:06�pm, wrote:
On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 07:40:10 -0700 (PDT), cmyr wrote: � Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. The anti reversion cone was a dirty fix for a crappy header design. Better than a manifold, but not as good as a proper "tuned" header. As I recall, this system was on the cover of Hot Rod magazine, on a high end test vehicle,and was "scientifically" researched. In this instance the reference to a crappy header design would be wrong. |
#15
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![]() "cmyr" wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 8:06?pm, wrote: On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 07:40:10 -0700 (PDT), cmyr wrote: ? Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. The anti reversion cone was a dirty fix for a crappy header design. Better than a manifold, but not as good as a proper "tuned" header. As I recall, this system was on the cover of Hot Rod magazine, on a high end test vehicle,and was "scientifically" researched. In this instance the reference to a crappy header design would be wrong. All the previous 6 or7 posters have come up with methods of increasing VE w/o superchargers. I want to add 4 or more valves per cylinder which would probably increase the mass of the valve train. Certainly the complexity. I don't see how a massive rocker arm or longer fatter pushrod could decrease VE. Certainly a larger valve head would increase mass but would also increase VE. A thicker valve stem would increase mass and decrease VE but I think only marginally. I think the only way more mass would decrease VE would be if the push rods were rubber. Tom |
#16
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Tom Wait wrote:
"cmyr" wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 8:06?pm, wrote: On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 07:40:10 -0700 (PDT), cmyr wrote: ? Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. The anti reversion cone was a dirty fix for a crappy header design. Better than a manifold, but not as good as a proper "tuned" header. As I recall, this system was on the cover of Hot Rod magazine, on a high end test vehicle,and was "scientifically" researched. In this instance the reference to a crappy header design would be wrong. All the previous 6 or7 posters have come up with methods of increasing VE w/o superchargers. I want to add 4 or more valves per cylinder which would probably increase the mass of the valve train. Certainly the complexity. I don't see how a massive rocker arm or longer fatter pushrod could decrease VE. Certainly a larger valve head would increase mass but would also increase VE. A thicker valve stem would increase mass and decrease VE but I think only marginally. I think the only way more mass would decrease VE would be if the push rods were rubber. Tom The British made some WWII engines with rotating cylinder sleeves that had in and out ports cut into them - rotary valves! No poppets. Good performance, but burned oil and left conspicuous smoke trails, not a good thing for a warbird to do. That's what I remember from an engine class, unless I'm hallucinating again. |
#17
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Ah yes the "sleeve valve" engine
Bristol's Hercules in the radial engined Halifax and Lancaster bombers, and Centaurus in the Sea Fury and several transports. Also the Napier Sabre in the Hawker Typhoon and early Tempest. The Centaurus turned into a real workhorse, but the Sabre died out quickly. The Brits seem to keep the Bristols in service in warbirds but American's tend to replace them with R-3350s, presumably for spares availability this side of the pond. Gerry On Jun 12, 3:55*pm, Torn Lawence wrote: Tom Wait wrote: "cmyr" wrote in message .... On Jun 11, 8:06?pm, wrote: On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 07:40:10 -0700 (PDT), cmyr wrote: ? Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. The anti reversion cone was a dirty fix for a crappy header design. Better than a manifold, but not as good as a proper "tuned" header. As I recall, this system was on the cover of Hot Rod magazine, on a high end test vehicle,and was "scientifically" researched. In this instance the reference to a crappy header design would be wrong. All the previous 6 or7 posters have come up with methods of increasing VE w/o superchargers. I want to add 4 or more valves per cylinder which would probably increase the mass of the valve train. Certainly the complexity.. I don't see how a massive rocker arm or longer fatter pushrod could decrease VE. Certainly a larger valve head would increase mass but would also increase VE. A thicker valve stem would increase mass and decrease VE but I think only marginally. I think the only way more mass would decrease VE would be if the push rods were rubber. Tom The British made some WWII engines with rotating cylinder sleeves that had in and out ports cut into them - rotary valves! No poppets. Good performance, but burned oil and left conspicuous smoke trails, not a good thing for a warbird to do. That's what I remember from an engine class, unless I'm hallucinating again.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#18
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Torn Lawence wrote:
The British made some WWII engines with rotating cylinder sleeves that had in and out ports cut into them - rotary valves! No poppets. Good performance, but burned oil and left conspicuous smoke trails, not a good thing for a warbird to do. That's what I remember from an engine class, unless I'm hallucinating again. That was a sleeve valve engine, Harry Ricardo's magnum opus. The Bristol Hercules and Centaurus. Wear was an issue they never did tackle. Charles |
#19
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On Jun 12, 4:27*pm, Gerry van Dyk wrote:
Ah yes the "sleeve valve" engine Bristol's Hercules in the radial engined Halifax and Lancaster bombers, and Centaurus in the Sea Fury and several transports. *Also the Napier Sabre in the Hawker Typhoon and early Tempest. The Centaurus turned into a real workhorse, but the Sabre died out quickly. *The Brits seem to keep the Bristols in service in warbirds but American's tend to replace them with R-3350s, presumably for spares availability this side of the pond. Gerry On Jun 12, 3:55*pm, Torn Lawence wrote: Tom Wait wrote: "cmyr" wrote in message .... On Jun 11, 8:06?pm, wrote: On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 07:40:10 -0700 (PDT), cmyr wrote: ? Going back to some hot rodding roots,I believe V.E. was increased in the late '60's-70's thru the use of a specially designed double cone affair placed in the collector pipe of a tuned exhaust system,which created a stronger vacuum effect , creating stronger scavenging of exhaust, and to some extent , helping draw more fuel/air mix into the cylinder. The anti reversion cone was a dirty fix for a crappy header design. Better than a manifold, but not as good as a proper "tuned" header. As I recall, this system was on the cover of Hot Rod magazine, on a high end test vehicle,and was "scientifically" researched. In this instance the reference to a crappy header design would be wrong. All the previous 6 or7 posters have come up with methods of increasing VE w/o superchargers. I want to add 4 or more valves per cylinder which would probably increase the mass of the valve train. Certainly the complexity. I don't see how a massive rocker arm or longer fatter pushrod could decrease VE. Certainly a larger valve head would increase mass but would also increase VE. A thicker valve stem would increase mass and decrease VE but I think only marginally. I think the only way more mass would decrease VE would be if the push rods were rubber. Tom The British made some WWII engines with rotating cylinder sleeves that had in and out ports cut into them - rotary valves! No poppets. Good performance, but burned oil and left conspicuous smoke trails, not a good thing for a warbird to do. That's what I remember from an engine class, unless I'm hallucinating again.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If you ignore oil consumption, (No one succeeded in fixing that problem.) Bristol sleeve valve radials had a lot to recommend them. Maybe today with modern metallurgy and high temperature elastomers someone could. However, without poppet valves and rocker towers in the heads, the engine diameter was much smaller. Without a hot exhaust valve in the combustion chamber, the compression ratio could be a point or two higher with the same octane fuel and the same detonation margins - and the engine tended to last longer. At the time, and maybe still, poppet exhaust valves were the weak point. They have Sir Harry Ricardo to thank for the sleeve valve design. |
#20
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![]() "Charles Vincent" wrote in message news ![]() Torn Lawence wrote: The British made some WWII engines with rotating cylinder sleeves that had in and out ports cut into them - rotary valves! No poppets. Good performance, but burned oil and left conspicuous smoke trails, not a good thing for a warbird to do. That's what I remember from an engine class, unless I'm hallucinating again. That was a sleeve valve engine, Harry Ricardo's magnum opus. The Bristol Hercules and Centaurus. Wear was an issue they never did tackle. When engines were changed as often as shirts, and as easily as shoes, that isn't a big issue either, IMHO. You have always got spares sitting around wherever you stop frequently, and in an hour or so, you put in a new engine and are on your way. -- Jim in NC |
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