Anyone run nitrous?
Anyone run nitrous?
(01-22-2010, 03:43 AM)krazy4 I know that in the truck diesel world it works well.
(01-22-2010, 03:43 AM)krazy4 I know that in the truck diesel world it works well.
I'll bet it would work awesome. My propane setup works really well. There is no reason an IDI engine couldn't run it.
(01-22-2010, 07:38 AM)ForcedInduction They don't have prechambers that can explode.Are you sure about that? And why not use with turbo?
There is also no point to using it with a turbo except to get the turbo spooled. With a VNT, even that is eliminated.
(01-22-2010, 07:38 AM)ForcedInduction(01-22-2010, 03:43 AM)krazy4 I know that in the truck diesel world it works well.
They don't have prechambers that can explode.
There is also no point to using it with a turbo except to get the turbo spooled. With a VNT, even that is eliminated.
(01-22-2010, 07:38 AM)ForcedInduction(01-22-2010, 03:43 AM)krazy4 I know that in the truck diesel world it works well.
They don't have prechambers that can explode.
There is also no point to using it with a turbo except to get the turbo spooled. With a VNT, even that is eliminated.
(01-22-2010, 05:57 PM)jeemu Are you sure about that? And why not use with turbo?A turbo does the same thing as nitrous without ever needing a refill.
(01-22-2010, 09:21 PM)krazy4 Why would there be no point in running nitrous?You already have a turbo that can support everything your injection pump can flow. There are gobs of 2-stage boost controllers for sale and making one from junkyard parts is easy.
(01-22-2010, 05:57 PM)jeemu Are you sure about that? And why not use with turbo?A turbo does the same thing as nitrous without ever needing a refill.
(01-22-2010, 09:21 PM)krazy4 Why would there be no point in running nitrous?You already have a turbo that can support everything your injection pump can flow. There are gobs of 2-stage boost controllers for sale and making one from junkyard parts is easy.
(01-23-2010, 10:29 AM)ForcedInductionhttp://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/gener...index.html(01-22-2010, 05:57 PM)jeemu Are you sure about that? And why not use with turbo?A turbo does the same thing as nitrous without ever needing a refill.
(01-22-2010, 09:21 PM)krazy4 Why would there be no point in running nitrous?You already have a turbo that can support everything your injection pump can flow. There are gobs of 2-stage boost controllers for sale and making one from junkyard parts is easy.
(01-23-2010, 10:29 AM)ForcedInductionhttp://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/gener...index.html(01-22-2010, 05:57 PM)jeemu Are you sure about that? And why not use with turbo?A turbo does the same thing as nitrous without ever needing a refill.
(01-22-2010, 09:21 PM)krazy4 Why would there be no point in running nitrous?You already have a turbo that can support everything your injection pump can flow. There are gobs of 2-stage boost controllers for sale and making one from junkyard parts is easy.
(01-23-2010, 04:30 PM)jeemu http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/gener...index.html
(01-23-2010, 04:30 PM)jeemu http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/gener...index.html
(01-23-2010, 04:30 PM)jeemu http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/gener...index.html
(01-23-2010, 04:30 PM)jeemu http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/gener...index.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9Z5Hd0yqvg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCNZfUO0cLY
(01-23-2010, 07:15 PM)Kiwibacon They're using it to provide more oxygen to burn more fuel without providing more cooling air.Nitrous gets extremely cold as it expands out of the nozzle. So, it would actually be better than water injection in a sense if it weren't more expensive to refill and blow up your prechambers.
Quote:When nitrous oxide is added to the combustion process with the correct amount of fuel, it dramatically increases the horsepower output.Key line from that article. Like an intercooler, nitrous alone won't add any more power unless you increase the fuel to match.
(01-23-2010, 10:32 PM)krazy4 Do you have any experience with nitrous on an IDI engine?Why the hell would I want to blow up my engine?
(01-23-2010, 07:15 PM)Kiwibacon They're using it to provide more oxygen to burn more fuel without providing more cooling air.Nitrous gets extremely cold as it expands out of the nozzle. So, it would actually be better than water injection in a sense if it weren't more expensive to refill and blow up your prechambers.
Quote:When nitrous oxide is added to the combustion process with the correct amount of fuel, it dramatically increases the horsepower output.Key line from that article. Like an intercooler, nitrous alone won't add any more power unless you increase the fuel to match.
(01-23-2010, 10:32 PM)krazy4 Do you have any experience with nitrous on an IDI engine?Why the hell would I want to blow up my engine?
(01-24-2010, 09:43 AM)ForcedInduction(01-23-2010, 07:15 PM)Kiwibacon They're using it to provide more oxygen to burn more fuel without providing more cooling air.Nitrous gets extremely cold as it expands out of the nozzle. So, it would actually be better than water injection in a sense if it weren't more expensive to refill and blow up your prechambers.
(01-24-2010, 09:43 AM)ForcedInduction(01-23-2010, 07:15 PM)Kiwibacon They're using it to provide more oxygen to burn more fuel without providing more cooling air.Nitrous gets extremely cold as it expands out of the nozzle. So, it would actually be better than water injection in a sense if it weren't more expensive to refill and blow up your prechambers.
(01-24-2010, 09:43 AM)ForcedInduction(01-23-2010, 10:32 PM)krazy4 Do you have any experience with nitrous on an IDI engine?Why the hell would I want to blow up my engine?
Do you have any experience running gasoline in your engine? How do you know its bad if you haven't tried it?
(01-24-2010, 09:43 AM)ForcedInduction(01-23-2010, 10:32 PM)krazy4 Do you have any experience with nitrous on an IDI engine?Why the hell would I want to blow up my engine?
Do you have any experience running gasoline in your engine? How do you know its bad if you haven't tried it?
(01-24-2010, 03:36 PM)Kiwibacon Given that water injection does bugger all
(01-25-2010, 12:40 AM)krazy4 How do you know it blows IDI engines then?The prechamber has orifices to limit the air volume into it. Nitrous is much more dense than air until it breaks down from the heat of compression, this means the prechamber will have to endure far higher internal pressures during combustion.
(01-23-2010, 09:29 PM)willbhere4u http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9Z5Hd0yqvg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCNZfUO0cLY
(01-24-2010, 03:36 PM)Kiwibacon Given that water injection does bugger all
(01-25-2010, 12:40 AM)krazy4 How do you know it blows IDI engines then?The prechamber has orifices to limit the air volume into it. Nitrous is much more dense than air until it breaks down from the heat of compression, this means the prechamber will have to endure far higher internal pressures during combustion.
(01-23-2010, 09:29 PM)willbhere4u http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9Z5Hd0yqvg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCNZfUO0cLY
(01-25-2010, 01:47 AM)ForcedInduction(01-24-2010, 03:36 PM)Kiwibacon Given that water injection does bugger all
Except cool the intake air, provide a few hp boost and, most importantly, keep the cylinders clean. All it takes is about $1.75/gallon.
(01-25-2010, 01:47 AM)ForcedInduction(01-24-2010, 03:36 PM)Kiwibacon Given that water injection does bugger all
Except cool the intake air, provide a few hp boost and, most importantly, keep the cylinders clean. All it takes is about $1.75/gallon.
(01-25-2010, 02:38 AM)Kiwibacon Cool the intake air to the minimum of the wet bulb temp (max cooling is a few degrees, nothing at all if the humidity is up).Atomization plays a huge role in its effectiveness. Use a washer pump and you'll get jack shit for results, use a 200psi pump with a very fine atomizer and you'll get the best possible.
Quote:At 20C with 50% humidity the coldest you can get the intake is 14C. At 70% humidity you can't go lower than 16C.Both of which are much better than nothing!
Quote:That's without the downsides like erosion of compressor wheels.Nobody with any level of seriousness would consider pre-turbo injection.
Quote:HP boost on water alone, I have yet to see anything to support that.Exact same as an intercooler, nitrous or more boost. You must inject more fuel to actually use the added density of air. As has been discussed many times over.
(01-25-2010, 02:38 AM)Kiwibacon Cool the intake air to the minimum of the wet bulb temp (max cooling is a few degrees, nothing at all if the humidity is up).Atomization plays a huge role in its effectiveness. Use a washer pump and you'll get jack shit for results, use a 200psi pump with a very fine atomizer and you'll get the best possible.
Quote:At 20C with 50% humidity the coldest you can get the intake is 14C. At 70% humidity you can't go lower than 16C.Both of which are much better than nothing!
Quote:That's without the downsides like erosion of compressor wheels.Nobody with any level of seriousness would consider pre-turbo injection.
Quote:HP boost on water alone, I have yet to see anything to support that.Exact same as an intercooler, nitrous or more boost. You must inject more fuel to actually use the added density of air. As has been discussed many times over.
(01-25-2010, 01:47 AM)forcedinduction The prechamber has orifices to limit the air volume into it. Nitrous is much more dense than air until it breaks down from the heat of compression, this means the prechamber will have to endure far higher internal pressures during combustion.
(01-25-2010, 01:47 AM)forcedinduction The prechamber has orifices to limit the air volume into it. Nitrous is much more dense than air until it breaks down from the heat of compression, this means the prechamber will have to endure far higher internal pressures during combustion.
(01-28-2010, 05:27 PM)HoleshotHolset No doubt there will be a lot of thermal shock + higher cylinder pressures...but will it really cause the prechambers to shatter?I've seen them explode in somebody's engine from filling the tank with g@soline. Blew out the bottom of the prechambers at the orifice holes and the metal destroyed the pistons. Probably would have been a really interesting sound to capture.
Quote:Like ole Gale Banks' smokeless racer project - he had no fewer than 3 solenoids plumbed up to various nozzles with a gigantic at the head end. No wonder she burned clean, Gale. Sheesh.Thats how you market intake and exhaust products that don't do anything.
(01-28-2010, 05:27 PM)HoleshotHolset No doubt there will be a lot of thermal shock + higher cylinder pressures...but will it really cause the prechambers to shatter?I've seen them explode in somebody's engine from filling the tank with g@soline. Blew out the bottom of the prechambers at the orifice holes and the metal destroyed the pistons. Probably would have been a really interesting sound to capture.
Quote:Like ole Gale Banks' smokeless racer project - he had no fewer than 3 solenoids plumbed up to various nozzles with a gigantic at the head end. No wonder she burned clean, Gale. Sheesh.Thats how you market intake and exhaust products that don't do anything.
(01-25-2010, 06:20 AM)forcedinduction Atomization plays a huge role in its effectiveness. Use a washer pump and you'll get jack shit for results, use a 200psi pump with a very fine atomizer and you'll get the best possible.
Quote:At 20C with 50% humidity the coldest you can get the intake is 14C. At 70% humidity you can't go lower than 16C.Both of which are much better than nothing!
(01-25-2010, 06:20 AM)forcedinduction Exact same as an intercooler, nitrous or more boost. You must inject more fuel to actually use the added density of air. As has been discussed many times over.
(01-25-2010, 06:20 AM)forcedinduction Atomization plays a huge role in its effectiveness. Use a washer pump and you'll get jack shit for results, use a 200psi pump with a very fine atomizer and you'll get the best possible.
Quote:At 20C with 50% humidity the coldest you can get the intake is 14C. At 70% humidity you can't go lower than 16C.Both of which are much better than nothing!
(01-25-2010, 06:20 AM)forcedinduction Exact same as an intercooler, nitrous or more boost. You must inject more fuel to actually use the added density of air. As has been discussed many times over.
(01-28-2010, 08:40 PM)Kiwibacon Pre-turbo injection is everywhere on the net. Serious or not that's what these turkeys are trying.Like has been said many times, people don't have to be intelligent to screw with their car or use the internet.
(01-28-2010, 08:40 PM)Kiwibacon Pre-turbo injection is everywhere on the net. Serious or not that's what these turkeys are trying.Like has been said many times, people don't have to be intelligent to screw with their car or use the internet.
WhitbreadDankcorey22 Whitbread- At what boost pressure did that thing explode like that?Nitrous backfire.
Still think nitrous is safe and harmless?
http://forums.tdiclub.com/showthread.php...ost2858824
WhitbreadDankcorey22 Whitbread- At what boost pressure did that thing explode like that?Nitrous backfire.
Quote:I've seen them explode in somebody's engine from filling the tank with g@soline. Blew out the bottom of the prechambers at the orifice holes and the metal destroyed the pistons. Probably would have been a really interesting sound to capture.
Quote:Thats how you market intake and exhaust products that don't do anything.
(02-03-2010, 03:28 AM)ForcedInduction Still think nitrous is safe and harmless?
Quote:I've seen them explode in somebody's engine from filling the tank with g@soline. Blew out the bottom of the prechambers at the orifice holes and the metal destroyed the pistons. Probably would have been a really interesting sound to capture.
Quote:Thats how you market intake and exhaust products that don't do anything.
(02-03-2010, 03:28 AM)ForcedInduction Still think nitrous is safe and harmless?
(02-10-2010, 02:03 PM)HoleshotHolset running a diesel on gas isn't the same as injecting nitrous in a diesel.
(02-10-2010, 02:03 PM)HoleshotHolset running a diesel on gas isn't the same as injecting nitrous in a diesel.
all things in moderation!
(02-10-2010, 08:13 PM)ForcedInduction Same effect. You're cramming a far more dense cocktail into the PC that expands faster than the orifices can let it out.
(02-10-2010, 08:13 PM)ForcedInduction Same effect. You're cramming a far more dense cocktail into the PC that expands faster than the orifices can let it out.
I'm running a 140 hp jet in my 85 300d and it loves it. I've made one run at the track and it ran 16.3 at like 80 mph. The car has a maxed out stock pump and a 4 speed from a 240d. Also that 16.3 time was with no traction in first gear and i believe it was around a 2.4 60ft time. I've never had any issues with the spray except when it runs out. I run about 24 lbs of boost normally and around 30 lbs on spray. The huge advantage is from off idle rpm to about 4000 rpm. After that there's just a lack of fuel. Oh and the other big disadvantage is the 500 dollar spec clutch wont hold in 3rd and 4th gear when spraying.
(07-12-2010, 10:53 AM)gen3performance The car has a maxed out stock pumpThat is WAY too much boost. You don't need any more than 18psi with a stock pump, any more than that and you're actually reducing performance.
...
I run about 24 lbs of boost normally and around 30 lbs on spray.
(07-12-2010, 05:09 PM)McAdam so, does propane work on IDI engines withough toasting them?
(07-12-2010, 10:53 AM)gen3performance The car has a maxed out stock pumpThat is WAY too much boost. You don't need any more than 18psi with a stock pump, any more than that and you're actually reducing performance.
...
I run about 24 lbs of boost normally and around 30 lbs on spray.
(07-12-2010, 05:09 PM)McAdam so, does propane work on IDI engines withough toasting them?
What's the point of injecting NO2 if you don't have the fuel to supplement it?
I'm using LPG on my om602 turbo. You cannot use a lot as it'll detonate. I have a petrol-car setup in my car (petrol cars here in europe are often converted to LPG because of the cheaper price of LPG).
The kit consists of:
a LPG tank cylinder or donought. I have the donought type that goes in the place of the spare tire.
an evaporator. This turns the LPG from its liquid state to gaseous state. This needs to be connected to engine's cooling system to warm it up as it will freeze if it isn't.
Electric valves. I have 3 valves in my car. One is in the tank. One as the LPG pipes enter the engine bay and the final one is in the evaporator.
The pipes are brass pipes wrapped in tough, flexible PVC. The pipes are designed to be bent rather than ruptured. In case of a rupture and rapid pressure decrease, there is a valve in the tank that blocks the flow of LPG.
All the 3 valves are connected to a main switch within the cabin. If the switch is turned on, the valve in the tank is open. The other 2 valves in the engine bay (and the evaporator) are turned on by a pressure switch set to about 5psi. The pressure switch get the power from the cabin switch, so if the cabin switch is turned off the pressure switch cannot power the valves.
The evaporator has 2 controls, one for the pressure of LPG (increases flow of LPG in the whole range) and a spring pressure control. This controls the flow of LPG in high engine loads. The evaporator flows LPG based on vacuum created in the AIR filter box. The more vacuum there is, the more LPG it'll flow.
All these controls are set to minimum, otherwise the engine will ping.
The power is very noticeable. With LPG turned of I feel the car, a 190D with om602 turbo, as sluggish compared to it running with LPG turned on.
So, IDI engines can benefit from LPG, but maybe not as much as DI engines. The factors can be the hot PCs as well as high compression. DI engines are generally running at 16.5 - 18.5 / 1 compression. Our engines are designed to run at 22/1 compression. LPG has a higher octane compared to petrol, but still not high enough no to detonate under the high compressions of a diesel engine.
So at low amounts, LPG works in an IDI turbo engine.
Deni
(07-14-2010, 02:53 AM)Deni What's the point of injecting NO2 if you don't have the fuel to supplement it?For the stock turbo it could help spool it up and increase performance off the line as a VNT turbo would do.
Quote:I'm using LPG on my om602 turbo. You cannot use a lot as it'll detonate.As was my point. The hot ball in the prechamber will ignite propane on contact at heavy loads (high combustion temperatures). I believe that you just aren't hearing the detonation anymore because of the reduced fuel quantity (combustion intensity).
Quote:LPG has a higher octane compared to petrol, but still not high enough no to detonate under the high compressions of a diesel engine.At idle and low loads yes, compression is a minimum of 256*c during cranking just to ignite the diesel. But once heavily loaded and with boost the compression is much hotter (around 580*c at stock boost) and enough to autoignite the propane.
(07-14-2010, 02:53 AM)Deni What's the point of injecting NO2 if you don't have the fuel to supplement it?For the stock turbo it could help spool it up and increase performance off the line as a VNT turbo would do.
Quote:I'm using LPG on my om602 turbo. You cannot use a lot as it'll detonate.As was my point. The hot ball in the prechamber will ignite propane on contact at heavy loads (high combustion temperatures). I believe that you just aren't hearing the detonation anymore because of the reduced fuel quantity (combustion intensity).
Quote:LPG has a higher octane compared to petrol, but still not high enough no to detonate under the high compressions of a diesel engine.At idle and low loads yes, compression is a minimum of 256*c during cranking just to ignite the diesel. But once heavily loaded and with boost the compression is much hotter (around 580*c at stock boost) and enough to autoignite the propane.
(07-14-2010, 06:31 AM)ForcedInduction For the stock turbo it could help spool it up and increase performance off the line as a VNT turbo would do.
Quote:I believe that you just aren't hearing the detonation anymore because of the reduced fuel quantity (combustion intensity).
Quote:Water/methanol injection is a much safer/better alternative to propane. You get the charge air cooling, cylinder cleaning and "steam engine" effects of the water plus additional fuel of the methanol. Propane and methanol both have the same autoignition temperature, however the hygroscopic methanol is combined with the water and doesn't separate into a gas until late in compression. That means what does come in contact with the hot ball will not detonate the rest of the methanol. Water/Methanol injection also has two more advantages in that it can't be pre-ignited by any hot-spots in the combustion chamber (other than the PC) and the water will scrub away the carbon that could cause hot spots in the first place.
(07-14-2010, 06:31 AM)ForcedInduction For the stock turbo it could help spool it up and increase performance off the line as a VNT turbo would do.
Quote:I believe that you just aren't hearing the detonation anymore because of the reduced fuel quantity (combustion intensity).
Quote:Water/methanol injection is a much safer/better alternative to propane. You get the charge air cooling, cylinder cleaning and "steam engine" effects of the water plus additional fuel of the methanol. Propane and methanol both have the same autoignition temperature, however the hygroscopic methanol is combined with the water and doesn't separate into a gas until late in compression. That means what does come in contact with the hot ball will not detonate the rest of the methanol. Water/Methanol injection also has two more advantages in that it can't be pre-ignited by any hot-spots in the combustion chamber (other than the PC) and the water will scrub away the carbon that could cause hot spots in the first place.
(07-15-2010, 04:07 AM)Deni Maybe, but wouldn't I experience a decrease in power rather than an increase in power if I have detonation?Not necessarily. Its like too advanced timing, it starts burning before TDC but it has more energy released during the expansion stroke.
Quote:but I think I'm better off with an intercooler than w/i.Yes, its better to put money into an intercooler first. WI can always be added later for even more cooling and power.
(07-15-2010, 04:07 AM)Deni Maybe, but wouldn't I experience a decrease in power rather than an increase in power if I have detonation?Not necessarily. Its like too advanced timing, it starts burning before TDC but it has more energy released during the expansion stroke.
Quote:but I think I'm better off with an intercooler than w/i.Yes, its better to put money into an intercooler first. WI can always be added later for even more cooling and power.
I cannot comment on the volume of air that the turbo is moving at specific boost levels since i have not done the math. However i can assure you that even at extremely high rpm there is an increase in power when i activate the N2O. I agree that the pump is not delivering any more fuel but I can only assume the N2O is burning the trace amounts of unburned fuel or possibly the combustion is happening faster. I'm not saying your math is flawed in anyway, I'm just saying there is a definite increase in engine power at all rpm. A huge increase at low rpm and a small increase at high rpm all the way up to governor speed. I'm not gonna say math is wrong being an engineering student, but i do know that alot of things dont make sense when making horsepower and torque.
Also, is the massive temperature drop of the N2O figured into the numbers?
Also, I agree that there is something wrong with the clutch since it doesnt hold. Possibly oil from the rear main or something.
I had a 240d with water meth before this car and had clutch issues in high gear when spraying the water...however i was also running a tall rear end gear from a 300sd and the clutch had a lot of miles on it. I believe it was like a 3.07 gear.
(07-18-2010, 02:29 PM)gen3performance there is an increase in power when i activate the N2O.That was explained earlier. The nitrous is cooling the air and supplementing oxygen for the hot air.
Quote:Also, is the massive temperature drop of the N2O figured into the numbers?Yes.
Quote:I had a 240d with water methHow much were you injecting and what ratio?
Quote:Propane and water meth can cause detonation since they are fuels and not timed like the injection of the diesel fuel.W/M won't unless the methanol ratio is too high.
Quote:Assuming all the parts hold together, the worst thing nitrous will do is put the fire out.Ever seen a nitrous backfire? More oxygen isn't the only thing it does.
(07-18-2010, 02:29 PM)gen3performance there is an increase in power when i activate the N2O.That was explained earlier. The nitrous is cooling the air and supplementing oxygen for the hot air.
Quote:Also, is the massive temperature drop of the N2O figured into the numbers?Yes.
Quote:I had a 240d with water methHow much were you injecting and what ratio?
Quote:Propane and water meth can cause detonation since they are fuels and not timed like the injection of the diesel fuel.W/M won't unless the methanol ratio is too high.
Quote:Assuming all the parts hold together, the worst thing nitrous will do is put the fire out.Ever seen a nitrous backfire? More oxygen isn't the only thing it does.
(07-18-2010, 04:15 PM)ForcedInduction [quote='gen3performance' pid='14750' dateline='1279481390']there is an increase in power when i activate the N2O.That was explained earlier. The nitrous is cooling the air and supplementing oxygen for the hot air.
Quote:Also, is the massive temperature drop of the N2O figured into the numbers?Yes.
Quote:I had a 240d with water methHow much were you injecting and what ratio?
Quote:Propane and water meth can cause detonation since they are fuels and not timed like the injection of the diesel fuel.W/M won't unless the methanol ratio is too high.
Quote:Assuming all the parts hold together, the worst thing nitrous will do is put the fire out.Ever seen a nitrous backfire? More oxygen isn't the only thing it does.
(07-18-2010, 04:15 PM)ForcedInduction [quote='gen3performance' pid='14750' dateline='1279481390']there is an increase in power when i activate the N2O.That was explained earlier. The nitrous is cooling the air and supplementing oxygen for the hot air.
Quote:Also, is the massive temperature drop of the N2O figured into the numbers?Yes.
Quote:I had a 240d with water methHow much were you injecting and what ratio?
Quote:Propane and water meth can cause detonation since they are fuels and not timed like the injection of the diesel fuel.W/M won't unless the methanol ratio is too high.
Quote:Assuming all the parts hold together, the worst thing nitrous will do is put the fire out.Ever seen a nitrous backfire? More oxygen isn't the only thing it does.
(07-19-2010, 12:14 PM)gen3performance [Your combustion temps drop and you loose less heat to the block and cooling system and keep more energy in the combustion gasses to extract power from.
If I'm moving less air with the lower temperature factored in then why is there increase in power?
(07-19-2010, 12:14 PM)gen3performance [Your combustion temps drop and you loose less heat to the block and cooling system and keep more energy in the combustion gasses to extract power from.
If I'm moving less air with the lower temperature factored in then why is there increase in power?
(07-20-2010, 01:10 PM)ConnClark Also there is an effect on the specific heat ratio that is favorable with the N2O being present on the compression stroke and it decomposing to N2 and O2 on the power stroke.
(07-20-2010, 01:10 PM)ConnClark Also there is an effect on the specific heat ratio that is favorable with the N2O being present on the compression stroke and it decomposing to N2 and O2 on the power stroke.
Prechambers dont explode if using nitrous, also no back fire if you use it right.
I ran propane injection on one IDI ford turbo diesel in my younger days, truck ran great, was faster, got better fuel mileage, and Engine grenaded after 2,000 or so miles with the setup, Not again...
BTW gas was regulated at 8 psi and introduced post filter pre turbo above 2PSI of boost, by a normally open boost switch.
(09-15-2010, 01:31 AM)SicNick I ran propane injection on one IDI ford turbo diesel in my younger days, truck ran great, was faster, got better fuel mileage, and Engine grenaded after 2,000 or so miles with the setup, Not again...
BTW gas was regulated at 8 psi and introduced post filter pre turbo above 2PSI of boost, by a normally open boost switch.
(09-15-2010, 01:31 AM)SicNick I ran propane injection on one IDI ford turbo diesel in my younger days, truck ran great, was faster, got better fuel mileage, and Engine grenaded after 2,000 or so miles with the setup, Not again...
BTW gas was regulated at 8 psi and introduced post filter pre turbo above 2PSI of boost, by a normally open boost switch.
(09-15-2010, 02:58 AM)Deni Fumigation has the possibility to induce a lot of fuel in a short period of time and metering it is very very difficult.
(09-15-2010, 02:58 AM)Deni Fumigation has the possibility to induce a lot of fuel in a short period of time and metering it is very very difficult.
(09-15-2010, 05:05 AM)ForcedInduction Right. Thats why its best to build an airflow proportional system or at least something that gradually builds up flow when switched on, not just full on/off.
(09-15-2010, 05:05 AM)ForcedInduction Right. Thats why its best to build an airflow proportional system or at least something that gradually builds up flow when switched on, not just full on/off.
(09-15-2010, 10:26 AM)Deni some info on that bully dog is really bully shit. Like making the burn more efficient bla bla bla. People have to understand that propane is just another type of fuel.
(09-15-2010, 10:26 AM)Deni some info on that bully dog is really bully shit. Like making the burn more efficient bla bla bla. People have to understand that propane is just another type of fuel.
(09-15-2010, 10:41 AM)ForcedInduction You want to see some REAL bullshit look at ATS' claims.
http://www.atsdiesel.com/ats2/makegen/10...el_economy
(09-15-2010, 10:41 AM)ForcedInduction You want to see some REAL bullshit look at ATS' claims.
http://www.atsdiesel.com/ats2/makegen/10...el_economy