Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑26 Jan 2023, 21:54
reduction in demanded power increases prop pitch, reduces rpm and boost, and leans the fuelling
so actual throttling loss is zero or small
weak mixture at 20" manifold uses 17 imp gal/hr at low altitude
richening commenced above 46" manifold and 2700 rpm
Mustang 67" manifold/3000 rpm is WE power using 137 imp gal/hr - 61"/3000 rpm is takeoff using 112 imp gal/hr
Calum Douglas gave a good talk at the Inst.Mech.E a year or so ago
including the vortex throttle (known in WW2 and now in F1) .... and how without it losses seemed big to German boffins
probably as quote not in reality - leaning & coarse pitch 60% revs a strong boost regulator rather eliminating throttling
also mentions a WW2 fuel '62% iso-octane' - maybe the start of physics teachers saying petrol/gasoline is iso-octane ?
(presumably real fuel constituents equivalent to 62% IO were for practicality treated as 62% IO)
btw 1 Ginger Lacey said he blanked off the 10 psi boost auto-throttle hole to get 12 psi - and had a new engine daily
France May 1940 (or later in Far East) I wonder
thinking about the V16 BRM and its VT that never materialised ....
it's less than clear how it would have been worked in racing (maybe that's why it never materialised)
IMO throttling (or waste-gating or diverter?) at full power might have been quite useful
or (the engine having said RR insufficient valve travel) ....
how is there a problem (for regulation at the top end) if there's some breathing restriction at the top end ?
(50 years ago the California spec Saab 99 turbo had throttling at full power)
btw 2 'they' were supposedly building 4 new 'anniversary' BRM V16 cars - but maybe Covid killed that ?
better luck with an H-16 anniversary !
btw 3 Kermit Weeks seems to have shipped his Tempests 2 and 5 to the UK for completion
iirc his Sabre is good - and similarly there's others eg a Typhoon in Canada ?