Yepolefud wrote: There’s also the consideration of laminar vs. turbulent flow through the radiator.
Yepolefud wrote: There’s also the consideration of laminar vs. turbulent flow through the radiator.
AFAIK intercooling meant cooling between stages of superchargingringo wrote:As for intercooling, detonation prevention isn't the reason it's there.
Intercooling is more of a benefit to pre compression. That's my rule of thumb anyway. If there's no compression next in a cycle feel free to heat things up.
If there's a compression stage next, then inter cooling is the way to go. Things need to be as cool as possible between compression stages.
Theoretically if fuel is injected after compression of the air, then it should be injected hot; peak temps should increase after combustion (but as riffraff said, it's all empirical anyway.
Port inject and some DI is before compression is complete, so this favours cool injection i suppose.
Very good point. If the fuel is to burn it’ll have to evaporate somewhere along the line.riff_raff wrote:When comparing the pros/cons of intercooling versus DI, you must consider the net energy balance resulting from each. With an air/air heat exchanger used for intercooling, there is a transfer of energy to the cooling airflow. With DI, energy is only transferred from the air to the fuel mass, but there is very little energy lost in the process.
Actually, the primary benefit of using charge cooling between compression stages is that it improves the performance of the secondary compression device. With regards to SI combustion, I believe lean mixtures typically have less combustion stability than stoichiometric or slightly rich mixtures.olefud wrote:.....Generally, there are two concurrent advantages to intercooling; a/ providing a more stable combustion mixture and b/ a denser gas. The latter was rather important for WWII two-stage boosting and early on poor fuel, but the former is more germane to the fuel flow rate conundrum. While turbocharging can provide excess air, with fuel as the limiting factor, a leaner, more stable mixture can allow higher RPMs. It will be interesting to see which way the compromises go.
Yep, aka less work from the pistons on the compression stroke.riff_raff wrote:
Actually, the primary benefit of using charge cooling between compression stages is that it improves the performance of the secondary compression device. With regards to SI combustion, I believe lean mixtures typically have less combustion stability than stoichiometric or slightly rich mixtures.
I think we’re saying the same thing; the denser mixture is important for two-stage boosting.riff_raff wrote:Actually, the primary benefit of using charge cooling between compression stages is that it improves the performance of the secondary compression device. With regards to SI combustion, I believe lean mixtures typically have less combustion stability than stoichiometric or slightly rich mixtures.olefud wrote:.....Generally, there are two concurrent advantages to intercooling; a/ providing a more stable combustion mixture and b/ a denser gas. The latter was rather important for WWII two-stage boosting and early on poor fuel, but the former is more germane to the fuel flow rate conundrum. While turbocharging can provide excess air, with fuel as the limiting factor, a leaner, more stable mixture can allow higher RPMs. It will be interesting to see which way the compromises go.
Just that a first supercharger feeds pressurized air to a second supercharger in series to gain a greater total pressure boost. There’s a point of diminishing return for boost in a single supercharger. It was common for high altitude aircraft engines during WWII.ringo wrote:Olefud, when you say two stage boosting, what do you mean?
Well you don't have to go that far really. The pistons are the second stage of compression. Hence the intercooler between the compressor and engine.olefud wrote:Just that a first supercharger feeds pressurized air to a second supercharger in series to gain a greater total pressure boost. There’s a point of diminishing return for boost in a single supercharger. It was common for high altitude aircraft engines during WWII.ringo wrote:Olefud, when you say two stage boosting, what do you mean?
charge cooling is not primarily to benefit air density (ie massflow, hence power)ringo wrote: The pistons are the second stage of compression. Hence the intercooler between the compressor and engine.
So in essence, the denser air is important for even single stage boosting in a piston engine, as the pistons are the second compression stage. An intercooler is basically a must have if maximum power is to be considered.
@ Tommy What do you mean by increased supercharge?charge cooling is not primarily to benefit air density (ie massflow, hence power)
what dominates maximum power is boosting massflow by (relative to fuel quality) lowering the CR to allow increased supercharge (also some diesels do this)
this is what the supercharged aircraft engine was all about