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#76
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you are missing a crucial element again. Referring to Cervan's laws: neither has more 'energy' per volume of gas. The heated one has more energy per molecular mass which takes up more volume which destroys your ability to test the two comparitively by volume. A heated gas has less 'material' or mass and is therefore less dense. The resistance it provides is less than that of a cold gas. This means that cold gas per volume can most likely push a propeller with more strength than a heated gas... the other side is that per mass of the same gas, the heated one will have greater volume. Perhaps the balance b/w these two characteristics determines the design for a specified application of a turbo. Turbos need heat to make gains or they are no more than a supercharger. |
#77
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Here we go. As the HOT exhaust leaves the high pressure area and enters low pressure - it is given the space it needs to release potential energy. By expanding it cools down. It is the place whrere this expansion ocurrs that allows a turbo to harness the otherwise wasted engergy (heat energy) in exhaust. by expanding the gasses across impellers of different ratios and vector fields (quote FI here), the basic fans (impellers) capitalize on TWO DIFFERENT VOLUMES of A gas body at different temperatures as it (gas body) changes across them (simple fans) turbos need heat (or an available means of pressure differential) turbos need simple fans |
#78
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in an effort to finish this.. It is safe to assume that a turbo-ed engine is more efficient than a non-turbo-ed. But it is only 'kinda free' exhaust energy It sounds like Forced pays really close attention what he is doing, although some serious mathematical analysis may help further maximize his turbo settings.. his mileage is pretty impressive already. |
#79
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Cervan, if the turbo (either primary or secondary) is of the proper size and geometry, it extracts far more HP from the exhaust-heat than the pumping-work it adds to the piston-engine.
FI, thank you!! Yes, that was the point that got it all started. You claimed that having the turbo doing zero pumping-work at cruise-power (20hp as I recall) was more efficient. I pointed out that even at partial-output like 20hp, the piston-engine would run more efficiently if the turbo (using wasted heat-energy) was set up to do the work of overcoming intake-resistance; rather than using the pistons (whose work comes from burning additonal fuel). JT, I think you summed it up well.... turbos need heat.....and obviously, turbos need a 'fan'... ![]()
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WANT to BUY: 3.0L diesel engine. My other diesel is a.... 1962 Cat D9-19A, 2,000 cu-in TD 1961 Cat 966B, D333 TD, powershift 1985 Mack MS300P 8.8L TDI, intercooled, crane-truck 1991 F350 4x4 5spd 7.3 IDI NA 1988 Dodge D50 4x4 5spd 2.4 Mitsu TD 1961 Lister-Petter 14hp/6kw Marine Corp genset weekly charging 5400 lbs of forklift batt for the off-grid homestead. 1965 Perkins 4-108 Fire/water Pump 1960 Deutz 20hp/8kw genset Last edited by dozer; 08-02-2008 at 01:35 PM. |
#80
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I said "turbos need heat" OR another available source of PRESSURE DIFFERENTIAL.
...and I just realized everything I have said was already stated by FI. - sorry |
#81
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JT, I didn't see an "or".
ps; I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts on the original question/point: Is a TD running at partial-load (say, 20-30hp) more efficient if the turbo isn't providing any pressure; or if the turbo is set up to provide enough boost (say, 3psi) to overcome intake-resistance losses? thanks
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WANT to BUY: 3.0L diesel engine. My other diesel is a.... 1962 Cat D9-19A, 2,000 cu-in TD 1961 Cat 966B, D333 TD, powershift 1985 Mack MS300P 8.8L TDI, intercooled, crane-truck 1991 F350 4x4 5spd 7.3 IDI NA 1988 Dodge D50 4x4 5spd 2.4 Mitsu TD 1961 Lister-Petter 14hp/6kw Marine Corp genset weekly charging 5400 lbs of forklift batt for the off-grid homestead. 1965 Perkins 4-108 Fire/water Pump 1960 Deutz 20hp/8kw genset |
#82
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NO. The gas cooled by expanding. As a by-product, it pushed on the vanes as it left. The work the heat did was carry potential energy, the pressure did the work. Heat=Potential Pressure Ok, I promise not to return to this thread. Mike, I hope you get better gas mileage |
#83
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
#84
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to be perfectly honest, I do not have enough information on that. I was trying to learn more about turbos. Thank you for the excellent dialogue. My belief is that a turbo-ed engine is more efficient than a n/a. pretty lame. |
#85
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partial load boost can't be bad |
#86
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It is. Thats how exhaust brakes work, backpressure.
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#87
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My thanks back your way JT...appreciate your posts and input.
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WANT to BUY: 3.0L diesel engine. My other diesel is a.... 1962 Cat D9-19A, 2,000 cu-in TD 1961 Cat 966B, D333 TD, powershift 1985 Mack MS300P 8.8L TDI, intercooled, crane-truck 1991 F350 4x4 5spd 7.3 IDI NA 1988 Dodge D50 4x4 5spd 2.4 Mitsu TD 1961 Lister-Petter 14hp/6kw Marine Corp genset weekly charging 5400 lbs of forklift batt for the off-grid homestead. 1965 Perkins 4-108 Fire/water Pump 1960 Deutz 20hp/8kw genset |
#88
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I don't know much about exhaust brakes, clarify. (use of expanding gases, or backpressure to crank?) it doesn't make sense that a turbo could be beneficial to an engine if it didn't make use of more than one form of energy at all times. you said it yourself. The expansion of the gases is the important part of a turbo's ability to compress air. As long as you put some exhaust into that turbo, you gain from the natural tendency of that gas to expand in your turbo and, in turn, compress air on the incoming side. How could the push of the piston forcing hot air into another chamber that now captures an additional form of energy return a loss at the crank that would have completed its revolution w/o that captured energy? |
#89
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Back pressure on crank = belt driven supercharger on crank. Compressing the intake air from energy stolen at the crank is even worth the gains from a simple supercharger. A turbo does this job AND harnesses expanding exhaust gasses across the turbine shaft through aerodynamic propagation. |
#90
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An exhaust brake works by causing backpressure in the exhaust manifold. That makes the pistons work harder to push the exhaust out of the cylinders.
A turbo or supercharger does not add any power to the engine. The additional power comes from more fuel being burned per cycle because the turbo/SC provides extra air. Thats why a turbo added to a 240D or non-turbo 300D with an otherwise unmodified engine does not add any power. Its only after the injection pump settings are changed that it can get a change in output. The same applies with making the turbo produce more boost than the engine receives fuel for, it adds restriction and actually reduces power. |
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