- Thread starter
- #21
PISTO
Automotive
- May 23, 2003
- 6
ErickFahlgreen.- Very good work, I will study the charts.
SBBlue.- That is a good point and one more reason to consider water as an option to increase power and efficiency.
Patprimer.- I think the clue is that what you are modifying is the relative humidity of the air while entering the manifold that produces an adhiabatic cooling (temperature reduction without heat transfer) same as those new room humidifiers, with the subsecuent reduction in volume and increase in O2 concentration. There is no point in adding so much water that water vapor (in case temaperature makes it boil)will displace O2.
I think the point is to relate the benefit at diferent relative humidity of the intake air, then evaluate other forms of using water injection DIRECTLY into the chamber to take advantage of the expansion factor.
So one thing is to air moisture to the air before entering the chamber to increase O2 and another system is water expansion inside the chamber. If both are used then add up the benefits.
Looks to me this is something worthwhile taking by someone that has a laboratory and could run lots of tests under diferent conditions to evaluate the practical and economic impact before a serius application is considered.
PISTO
SBBlue.- That is a good point and one more reason to consider water as an option to increase power and efficiency.
Patprimer.- I think the clue is that what you are modifying is the relative humidity of the air while entering the manifold that produces an adhiabatic cooling (temperature reduction without heat transfer) same as those new room humidifiers, with the subsecuent reduction in volume and increase in O2 concentration. There is no point in adding so much water that water vapor (in case temaperature makes it boil)will displace O2.
I think the point is to relate the benefit at diferent relative humidity of the intake air, then evaluate other forms of using water injection DIRECTLY into the chamber to take advantage of the expansion factor.
So one thing is to air moisture to the air before entering the chamber to increase O2 and another system is water expansion inside the chamber. If both are used then add up the benefits.
Looks to me this is something worthwhile taking by someone that has a laboratory and could run lots of tests under diferent conditions to evaluate the practical and economic impact before a serius application is considered.
PISTO