Sylva in New Zealand
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- Posts: 2605
- Joined: Wed Jul 01, 2009 12:31 pm
- Name: Jeff Wiltshire
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
The way to test it is on a Rolling Road, one run with and one without. You should see an increase in boost pressure and power without. My car made another 80BHP without the canister and only lost 5BHP with a very large K&N Cone filter.
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- Posts: 2605
- Joined: Wed Jul 01, 2009 12:31 pm
- Name: Jeff Wiltshire
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
Is there no way you can package the intercooler in front of the Radiator? Your inlet temps must get pretty high when you are running hard.
Just getting my head around this.
So you have a Rotrex Supercharger which makes 16PSI with the pulley you have on it and you've installed a wastegate to control the level of boost? So the supercharger is still trying to make the boost but you are bleeding it off? Would it not have been easier to change the pulley and underspeed the supercharger to give the desired results or put rods/pistons in to take the 16-20PSI the supercharger is capable of?
Looking at the picture you probable need to get a bigger exhaust for the power you are making.
Still looks great though
Just getting my head around this.
So you have a Rotrex Supercharger which makes 16PSI with the pulley you have on it and you've installed a wastegate to control the level of boost? So the supercharger is still trying to make the boost but you are bleeding it off? Would it not have been easier to change the pulley and underspeed the supercharger to give the desired results or put rods/pistons in to take the 16-20PSI the supercharger is capable of?
Looking at the picture you probable need to get a bigger exhaust for the power you are making.
Still looks great though
- 7ishNZ
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2014 12:23 pm
- Name: Evan Morgan
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
HI,
the wastegate limits the boost to 10psi as the motor has stock internals. The smaller pulley allows the boost to build much lower down the rev range.... it is a common trick with a supercharger.
Space is at a premium at the front.... the highest inlet temp I have seen so far is 50*c, in the slow part of the track.
Will try the test with the aircleaner next time it's on the dyno.
the wastegate limits the boost to 10psi as the motor has stock internals. The smaller pulley allows the boost to build much lower down the rev range.... it is a common trick with a supercharger.
Space is at a premium at the front.... the highest inlet temp I have seen so far is 50*c, in the slow part of the track.
Will try the test with the aircleaner next time it's on the dyno.
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- Posts: 2605
- Joined: Wed Jul 01, 2009 12:31 pm
- Name: Jeff Wiltshire
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
Evan, I think you are maybe confusing the way a 'normal' supercharger works and how a Rotrex works. Pulley size will dictate how fast the supercharger spins, the faster it spins the more boost it makes (until it overspeeds and falls out of its operating range). On a C30-94 the peak rpm is 100K at which point (all other things being equal) it should make 1.3-1.4 bar or thereabouts. You can step the speed of the charger down by having a bigger supercharger pulley so it only runs at 80K and 1bar (as an example). The speed reduction and boost reduction happens across the operating range of the charger.
Anyway, it looks great
Anyway, it looks great
- pigeondave
- Posts: 396
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2011 4:16 pm
- Name: David Malenczak
- Location: Brighton
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
7ishNZ wrote:Thanks Jeff.
Will set up the manometer and check the pressures across the filter.
Have you also done this for you intercooler?
there was a good article here http://www.autospeed.com/cms/article.html?&A=113178 about the guy looking at air flow out of the engine bay.
A few tweaks could see a big change in flow. It be interesting to see.
- adithorp
- Posts: 1198
- Joined: Thu Jul 02, 2009 8:26 am
- Name: adrian thorp
- Location: Hyde, Manchester
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
jeffw wrote:...Pulley size will dictate how fast the supercharger spins, the faster it spins the more boost it makes... ...You can step the speed of the charger down by having a bigger supercharger pulley so it only runs at 80K and 1bar (as an example). The speed reduction and boost reduction happens across the operating range of the charger.
Anyway, it looks great
But then he'd only have 1bar at higher engine revs. With the smaller pulleyand waste gate, he gets the 1bar low in the engine rev range and then holds at that right across the range.
- 7ishNZ
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2014 12:23 pm
- Name: Evan Morgan
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
Thanks adithorp....exactly what happens. I now have 10 psi boost at 4000 rpm, rather than 10psi at 6000, which was the case with the larger pulley. The power down low now is spectacular. ....
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- Posts: 2605
- Joined: Wed Jul 01, 2009 12:31 pm
- Name: Jeff Wiltshire
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
But low down is where the damage to the engine/transmission happens, why not let it rev out correctly with the right boost? Never mind, each to their own. I've got shocks to put back together for the first events of the year this weekend.
- 7ishNZ
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2014 12:23 pm
- Name: Evan Morgan
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
The point is that the engine is safe with stock internals at 10psi throughout the rev range. I can't get 10 psi at 4000 rpm with the larger pulley.
The engine is not safe at 16psi at any speed, it is knock limited, so the only way to achieve what I want is the wastegate. It also gives me the option to easily tune for E85 ethanol without the need to change pulleys... just use the dual map feature of the ecu.
I know it is not ideal to be venting boost, and once I blow it it and need to rebuild it, I'll fit the rods and pistons to suit.
The engine is not safe at 16psi at any speed, it is knock limited, so the only way to achieve what I want is the wastegate. It also gives me the option to easily tune for E85 ethanol without the need to change pulleys... just use the dual map feature of the ecu.
I know it is not ideal to be venting boost, and once I blow it it and need to rebuild it, I'll fit the rods and pistons to suit.
- 7ishNZ
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2014 12:23 pm
- Name: Evan Morgan
- Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Re: Sylva in New Zealand
Just built a new exhaust system and upped the boost.. after a long time on the dyno....406 rear wheel hp. Serious torque curve makes it a delight to drive.. idles round town like a stock Honda accord, pulls like a schoolboy.
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