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AUTOMOTIVE EXHAUST FLOW AND TEMPERATURE 2

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PINNEY

Mechanical
Jun 16, 2003
2
I need to design an exhaust extraction fan system.
What is the temperature and flow rate exiting the exhaust pipe? Where could I find this information??
Thanks
 
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Search this forum, the subject has come up a few times.
 
What kind of car (or whatever your working on) are you asking about? It depends on how lean/rich the engine your working on.....if we're even talking about a car here. I think 900 degrees at the header sounds familiar. Of course it would be less at the rear of the car.


Barney Demonbreun
Technician for Gary Force Acura, and owner of;
Ashland Motorsports
1304 Big Marrowbone Rd.
Ashland City, Tn. 37015
 
The answer to your question involves so many different variables it's impossible to answer with no more information than you've stated: Diesel or gasoline?
Nat. aspirated or blown?
RPM?
Load?
and the list goes on.

Here's your best bet:
run a test. Get a thermocouple and a reader; you can even use one like the Sears DVOM that has a thermocouple reader function.

"One test is worth a thousand expert opinions."
 
Rob, You forgot - publish your results here and we'll pull them apart.

Cheers

Greg Locock

Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips.
 
Pinney, temperature could be just about anything.

I believe flow usually works out around 2.2 CFM per horsepower when the exhaust has expanded back to atmospheric pressure. That will be a very rough starting point only. It is usual to have a much larger extraction system than that, and allow plenty of ambient air to bleed into it right at the header discharge point.
 
Is the question about exhaust extraction from a dyno room, or about exhaust scavenging an engine

Regards
pat pprimmer@acay.com.au
eng-tips, by professional engineers for professional engineers
Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora.
 
Greg:
"Rob, You forgot - publish your results here and we'll pull them apart."
LOL!
Yes, there's always that!

But to geet back to Pinney's question:
You could always assume 100% volumetric efficiency and sufficient length of pipe to drop the gas temperature to 500 F or so.
E.g., 300 cubic inch engine running 4000 rpm would produce 600,000 cubic inches of exhaust per minute x 1160/560 = 719 cfm.
call it 800 cfm and you should have your dyno room (if that's what it is) covered.
 
The equation in our handbook is to take the cfm of intake air (which includes the volumetric efficiency) and multiply it by 2.4 for a gasoline engine or 2.0 for a diesel.

This is probably more of a rule of thumb type of equation but it has been used longer than I've been around, so it would have been thrown out long ago if it didn't work.
 
That equation sounds like it would work just fine.
 
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