simplyfast wrote:
someone said previously in this post, or tried to make the connection, that varying intake trumpets are like variable valves. my goal was to disprove them. i did.
I’m the only one who talked about variable intake length. Read all my posts. My point was, and always has been, that you have to create an harmony between intake geometry and valve timing. I see that my first post was maybe too succinct and I don’t explained it completely so it was open to misunderstanding, but I think my second post was more clear. Anyway I try again, going a bit more in the details. Most of people around here will be tired and you’ll go crazy, I know, but I want to understand. The only thing that I want to know from you is where exactly I’m wrong so I can correct me.
When the intake valve opens the descending movement of the piston generate a low pressure wave that starts from the valve and goes up to the trumpet. Once it arrives at the edge it’s reflected as an high pressure wave that goes back to the valve. The time the waves requires to go up and down in the runner depends only by the temp of the gas and by the length of the runner so it doesn’t depend by the rpm. If the pressure wave arrives at the intake valve just a few crank degrees before the valve closes (we are in the compression stroke) the high pressure avoids gas being pushed in the intake, even better, if the delta pressure is enough it pushes more air in the cylinder. Intake valve then closes and piston continues the compression.
Now consider a different, lot lower, rpm, same valve timing and same intake length as before. The pressure waves require the same time to go up and down in the runner but now the peak of pressure arrives at the valve a lot earlier in term of crank angle because crank rotational speed is lower. The piston is very low, compression basically isn’t started, and the peak of pressure doesn’t help so much. The valve now remains open many degrees after the peak of pressure is arrived but the high pressure wave now is reflected as a low pressure wave. The pressure in the intake runner is lower than in the cylinder so the air is extracted, the piston, instead of compressing the charge in the cylinder is pushing it back in the intake runner. Then finally the valve closes and the real compression starts but we have lost lot of the charge.
Now to avoid this bad situation you have to establish again the right synchronism between waves and valve timing. You can :
A – Close the intake valve earlier (in term of crank degrees) changing the law lift vs. crank angle.
B – Change (Increase) runners length so the waves require more time to go up and down along the runner and peak of pressure arrives at the valve later (again in term of crank degrees)
A is variable valve timing and B is variable intake trumpets length.