KeithDyer
Industrial
- May 16, 2009
- 4
For what it's worth . . . . . . . . ,
Back in the late 70's and early 80's, I built engines and was crew for the premier Drag Boat Racer of that era, Eddie Hill.
We held all four drag boat association ET and MPH records at the same time, bests of 5.60's at 226 / 229 MPH. Exceptional win percentage, the boat to beat anywhere we ran it.
Typical Keith Black 500" Aluminum Chrysler Nitro Hemi just like all of the Top Fuel / Funny Car engines of the day. 14-71 blower making about 30 - 32 psi on a pass. We ran a HIGH percentage of Nitromethane (about 96-97%), with a crude water injection in place. We used the blower pressure from the intake manifold and ran it to a small Moon tank to move the water to nozzles above the fuel injector butterflies. The harder the pass, the more water that was delivered to the engine. Average water consumption was 1.1 / 1.2 liters per pass.
We used this method to primarily keep from having to tear the engine down between runs as we had little money to spend on parts and a small crew to perform such maintenance like all of the other teams. The same guys that were detonating the guts out of their engines every time down the track.
This system did what we needed it to do at the time. Once at Bakersfield (Lake Ming) we tried to use methanol in the system instead of water. Huge fireball at half track!! Like all hot rod guys, trying to get a little more out of the engine!!
Not real scientific, but effective enough to keep us racing up front and continuing to dominate the sport until Ed's violent crash at Firebird (Phoenix) in 1984.
Like I said up front, "FWIW"!!
Take care, K
Back in the late 70's and early 80's, I built engines and was crew for the premier Drag Boat Racer of that era, Eddie Hill.
We held all four drag boat association ET and MPH records at the same time, bests of 5.60's at 226 / 229 MPH. Exceptional win percentage, the boat to beat anywhere we ran it.
Typical Keith Black 500" Aluminum Chrysler Nitro Hemi just like all of the Top Fuel / Funny Car engines of the day. 14-71 blower making about 30 - 32 psi on a pass. We ran a HIGH percentage of Nitromethane (about 96-97%), with a crude water injection in place. We used the blower pressure from the intake manifold and ran it to a small Moon tank to move the water to nozzles above the fuel injector butterflies. The harder the pass, the more water that was delivered to the engine. Average water consumption was 1.1 / 1.2 liters per pass.
We used this method to primarily keep from having to tear the engine down between runs as we had little money to spend on parts and a small crew to perform such maintenance like all of the other teams. The same guys that were detonating the guts out of their engines every time down the track.
This system did what we needed it to do at the time. Once at Bakersfield (Lake Ming) we tried to use methanol in the system instead of water. Huge fireball at half track!! Like all hot rod guys, trying to get a little more out of the engine!!
Not real scientific, but effective enough to keep us racing up front and continuing to dominate the sport until Ed's violent crash at Firebird (Phoenix) in 1984.
Like I said up front, "FWIW"!!
Take care, K