Brian,
Did you get a chance to get the data on the flow of the cylinder head?
I did not, but I will - that I promise.justsomeguy wrote:Brian,
Did you get a chance to get the data on the flow of the cylinder head?
Some grades of aluminium do indeed spark - Yes I am sure this is aluminium.riff_raff wrote:Brian- Appreciate your updates. This sort of detailed technical information about race engines is hard to find in the public domain.
I know that ferrous metals and titanium produce sparks when ground, but I have never seen aluminum do this. Are you sure the barrel is aluminum? Also, what process did you use to determine the aluminum was a 7000 series alloy?
As for the barrel having a hard anodize coating, the only surfaces that appear to have an anodic coating are the dark green surfaces on the base. Hard anodize (MIL-A-8625, type 3) is usually dark green/gray. The shiny metallic surfaces of the OD/ID are definitely not anodized, but if the part is indeed aluminum it may be hard chrome or electroless nickel plating.
One quick way to determine what the material is would be to take measurements of it and calculate its volume. Then weigh it and determine the density.
That sounds great![url=http://www.traguspiercing.xyz/]J.A.W[/url]. wrote:If of interest, this ( in German, with English for diagram detail) article:
Runs a comparison of the original M-B 3.0/6 SOHC 2V cylinder head..
.. with the 'Cosworth'-type DOHC 4V pent-roof replacement.
Yeah, its about road cars, but since F1 is still limited to poppet valves, it may be worth a look..
Nice info - thanks for that.J.A.W. wrote:If of interest, this ( in German, with English for diagram detail) article: http://www.pvv.org/~syljua/merc/M104Motor.pdf
Runs a comparison of the original M-B 3.0/6 SOHC 2V cylinder head..
.. with the 'Cosworth'-type DOHC 4V pent-roof replacement.
Yeah, its about road cars, but since F1 is still limited to poppet valves, it may be worth a look..
I think it would be a better idea to measure the sizes of my own more modern V10 F1 engine - which has been said to be the 'best' design - we will possibly never see such a high rpm again. Its the Cosworth TJ unit.skippy wrote: ↑26 Dec 2017, 10:46Fabulous thread Brian and a big thank you for posting this unique thread. Any chance you could post the valve head OD's, the port throat diameters, valve stem diameters towards the head of the valve and also valve lifts? The reason I ask is that if we suppose that this is the "ideal" engine (even though it is old by today's standards, it's probably as close as the guy on the street will get to good statistical info from a race engine), then in theory this can translate to other similar style engines such as modern bike engines. Modern bike engines are built produce high hp/L but are also designed to pass strict emissions testing whereas F1 engines are not. I see it as just a matter of turning the above info into percentages and using that as a guide for engine development. i.e. as percentages of the bore area: (a) intake valve diameter is X% (b) intake throat area (intake throat area minus area of intake valve stem at head end) is Y% (c) intake valve lift is Z% of the bore diameter, and so on.
Once again thanks.