SZ wrote:
Re read what was posted in detail, and have a good, objective look at the first plot. Possibly forget where it's said to come from for a second;
From a model I have in Lotus Software and use to play with.
I know from the people who made that Model, that with that graphics, its perfectly possible to calculate air consumption as I said in a previous post.
So? What´s the problem? Can´t I have a paper from a F1 team? Can´t I make a model of a V10 using info from that paper and other I estimate thanks to this forum? Can´t I compare my plots with the plots in that paper? Can´t I correct assumptions, like heat exchanging modelization, for instance, to approach numbers and GUESS how they (Renault) work?
See, SZ: you are in a 1st world country uni, with a proper lab, resources, plenty of books, etc.
I have nothing, except internet. The only Uni subject where I studied Engines we have to share time with turbines and pumps, we spent 3/4 year studying water turbines because that was what the teacher did for a living. There is no lab, nor dyno, nor nothing in public unis arround here. Just a classroom, underpaid well predisposed people and some chalk.
If I want to understand how does a 3 liter NA engine to generate 1000HP I have to investigate. A LOT. In my humble models I made a lot of assumptions, sometimes wrong, and corrected them. But 120% VE is not a weird thing in F1 world. I have sources like this:
http://forums.autosport.com/showthread. ... id=2697327
OK, they maybe wrong, but thats all I have got. Gathering 1000s of tiny clues I keep on improving my models and designs (THAT OF COURSE I NEVER BUILD, because with what money???)
Also have some OLD OLD sources, like this:
A NASA paper transduced from an Italian study made in... 1927!!!
Should I trust? I dunno... but there it says 140% VE can be achieved in weird conditions in a 4 cyl engine.
SZ, I appreciate your posts cause you take the most out of me for posting here. I think you know a lot about engines, but I´m not sure about F1 ENGINES. You keep on discussing some numbers and also, as my mother tongue is not English, I may missunderstand some of your comments and it may happens viceversa.
So, its late and I want to get more "pragmatic" if you let me:
Volumetric Efficiency = (Actual CFM / Theoretical CFM) * 100
If you know HP at a given rpm you can approximate your VE (sea level):
VE = (HP * 792001.6) / (AP * CR * CID * RPM)
AP = atmospheric pressure [psi]
CR = compression ratio
VE = volumetric efficiency
CID = cubic inch displacement
RPM = revolutions per minute
(US units to make Chris life easier
)
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