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- From: ntaib@silver.ucs.indiana.edu (Iskandar Taib)
- Subject: Re: FAQ? (questions about engines)
- Message-ID: <Bu31B3.CBM@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu>
- Sender: news@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: silver.ucs.indiana.edu
- Organization: Indiana University
- References: <1992Aug27.083734.2254@inland.com> <1992Aug28.220048.9625@c3177208.ssr.hp.com> <1992Aug31.111533.2265@inland.com>
- Date: Sat, 5 Sep 1992 01:54:39 GMT
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <1992Aug31.111533.2265@inland.com> bloom@inland.com writes:
- >In article <1992Aug28.220048.9625@c3177208.ssr.hp.com>, bill@c3177208.ssr.hp.com (Bill Chidester) writes:
-
- >> : 2. Too cold a fuel or bad fuel contaminated with water. Cold fuel
- >> : is equivalent to low or no nitromethane.
- >>
- >> Actually, adding nitromethane to fuel will make an engine run cooler, not
- >> hotter (allowing lower temperature for a given RPM, or higher RPM for a
- >> given temperature). From the engine's point of view, "cold" = "good", so
- >> it will run faster and more efficiently. I agree with the water contami-
- >> nation, especially if you leave fuel sitting in an unsealed container in
- >> your flight box.
- >
- >I don't think the laws of thermodynamics can be violated! Nitro gives you
- >more power thru more heat per power stroke. Have you measured the
- >head temperature of an engine running more nitro??? I'd bet a big dinner
- >on this one.
-
-
- Actually he's right under some conditions.
-
- When the C/L speed fliers were told to limit their nitro (they were
- running 50-60% nitro, and the new rules said they had to run somewhat
- less - 40%?) they discovered that the engines ran hotter. Why? Well,
- with more nitro, you actually have to feed more fuel in per unit time,
- since nitro contains less energy (joules, or btu, or whatever unit
- you'd like to use) both per unit mass and per unit volume, since it
- releases oxygen upon burning, which is why it it used to augment power
- in the first place (it doesn't "contain" more power; gasoline has
- far more btu/cc than methanol or nitromethane does - it releases oxygen
- which would give the same effect as a turbocharger would).
-
- Now...
-
- Why do sport engines run hotter with more nitro? Well, nitro also has
- more or less the same effect as lowering the octane does in a gasoline
- engine. My conjecture is that it would be the same as increasing the
- compression ratio, the same way a turbocharger does (the end result being
- more air+fuel in the combustion chamber). So using more nitro can cause
- detonation, or pre-detonation conditions, unless you raise the head
- with shims (yes folx, those aren't gaskets under there, they are shims!).
- Us Combat people have known this for a long time. If your engine runs
- hot and blows plugs, put extra shims under the head. When an engine is
- new and tight an extra shim or two keeps you from blowing a plug every
- run. As the engine gets older and looser the number of shims can be re-
- duced. Reason is blowby decreases effective compression ratio.
-
- Hot plugs vs. cold plugs???
-
- Well, what I've heard is use the warmest plug you can get away with. Use
- a cold plug out of necessity (because they are blowing, or causing pre-
- detonation, etc.) not because they are "better", because they will actu-
- ally cut down on power and idling performance.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Iskandar Taib | The only thing worse than Peach ala
- Internet: NTAIB@SILVER.UCS.INDIANA.EDU | Frog is Frog ala Peach
- Bitnet: NTAIB@IUBACS !
-