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Rotary Tech - General Rotary Engine related tech section.. Tech section for general Rotary Engine... This includes, building 12As, 13Bs, 20Bs, Renesis, etc... |
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01-25-2010, 01:17 PM | #1 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Intake Design Exploration
So I've decided I want to produce a custom intake manifold, but I have no idea where to begin. Anyone have any links or words of wisdom on intake design? Plenum design, runner lengths (variable and fixed), pulse tuning, air intake velocity effect on torque and horsepower, etc, etc, etc. I'm looking for it all. I have a rough design in mind, but I would like to refine it and make it better and eventually using CFD to ensure the best possible outcome before producing it in real life.
So... Let 'em rip! http://books.google.com/books?id=DoY...age&q=&f=false
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 01-25-2010 at 01:42 PM.. |
01-25-2010, 03:50 PM | #2 | |
Clean S4 Nutswinger
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http://www.rx7club.com/showthread.php?t=199788
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-Ted -1986 Mazda RX7 Sport [DD/beater]: engine finally let go at 205k. parts car status. -1986 Mazda RX7 base [resto-mod project]: S5 n/a swap in progress. |
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01-25-2010, 05:32 PM | #3 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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That works well, but what about the other stuff? Plenum design and so forth? (The RCC is a different beast when it comes to math--we like the nitty gritty... I'm actually going to be looking into a book that deals specifically with this question I posted, though it's out of print)
I'm going to check out this book: Theory of Engine Manifold Design: Wave Action Methods for IC Engines ISBN: 0768006562
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 01-25-2010 at 07:02 PM.. |
01-28-2010, 06:37 PM | #4 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Okay, so that book is okay... but doesn't cover anything specifically with rotaries. I saw maybe 6-7 books total in my schools library concerned about rotaries, and they were all from the 70's... I may have to start looking up more ASE articles for it... sigh, not what I wanted.
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
01-29-2010, 09:06 AM | #5 |
Rotary Fanatic
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Rotaries aren't that special; treat them as a two stroke two cylinder of stated volume (ie, 1.1 or 1.3 literss), or as a four stroke engine with twice the RPM. Port timing info is available, and with all of that info, you should be able to calculate runner size and length and plenum volume, as well as throttle body size for your given peak torque/horsepower point.
As an interesting note, by using exhaust and intake runners a couple of inches longer on one rotor than the other, each rotor will have a different peak power point about 500 or so rpm apart, which leads to a wide peak power. Helpful if you have a particularly peaky motor like a P-port or a big bridge. |
01-29-2010, 02:40 PM | #6 | ||
Custom User Title
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Here are some more relevant posts by rotarygod:
http://www.rx7club.com/showthread.php?t=94362 Quote:
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01-29-2010, 05:42 PM | #7 | ||
RCC Loves Me Not You
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
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01-29-2010, 06:46 PM | #8 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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So I've started a preliminary design of the intake. And Suddenly everything I learned in Aero/Hydro dynamics is making sense to me and how I can mathematically apply what I learned. I may have a V2 of the manifold done by the end of the month. This should be interesting...
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
01-30-2010, 08:45 AM | #9 | |
Rotary Fanatic
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In as much as flow patterns are concerned, geometry is important, but as long as it's not shaped so as to -prevent- flow, you should be alright.
In an application where the throttle body is on the side of the plenum (facing forward in a rotary application), it's best to use a plenum four to six inches longer than the distance from the front of the first runner to the back of the last runner, and taper the plenum the entire way. This helps the air "slow down" earlier in the plenum instead of wanting to slam into the back wall, and helps the front runners breath. In a setup where this isn't done, the rear-most runner tends to ingest the most air, and the front-most one (from the throttle body's perspective) tends to ingest the least. In a side-facing throttle body, the best solution would be a setup that tapered in both directions, with the widest portion in the middle, and some sort of diffuser to help the air with it's right-angle turn into the plenum, going either right or left. However, in a rotary specifically, since the middle ports ingest less air anyway, you can get very good results with a simple tube with a throttle body stuck on it, and let the "bad" shape direct the majority of the air into the big ports, where they're needed. Also it's important to bell-mouth your runner entrance from the plenum, or better yet, use short velocity stacks actually sticking into the plenum. Quote:
It's really much more useful in V8 applications, where each pair of cylinders 360* off from each other is setup with peak power 500 RPM off from each other, creating, say, two cylinders making peak at 4500, two at 5000, two at 5500, and two at 6000, creating a very wide power curve. Obviously you're trading a reasonable amount of peak power (up to maybe 30hp) for this much wider band, but in situations where that's desirable (notably rally and drift racing, and some road racing), this is a good way to help. To really pull it off you need individual cylinder fuel and spark control, however. |
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01-30-2010, 11:46 AM | #10 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Alright, I think understand what you're saying concerning the Plenum design. Shouldn't be too hard to do a digital mark up in a few. As for the velocity stacks I was already considering doing that.
My question however is for turbo charged applications does wave tuning do that much to begin with? I'm curious because if I'm understanding it correctly the positive pressure comes on (for me anyways--Turbo 6PI) around 2k RPM. If i'm getting positive pressure that quickly, no matter what wave I tune for with the intake runner lengths I'm going to end up with more pressure than the wave could shove in by itself (even when it's not during a compression wave). If my thinking is correct then I could be able to have rather long runners and be fine power wise. My concern from this however is will throttle response be adversely affected by having abnormally long runners? As it stands right now I'm thinking about keeping the runner length the same as a stock NA (roughly 17" or so), but directed much differently so the air needs to only take one continuous turn once inside the manifold. I think the best bet for me (and everyone else who follows this thread) right now would be to focus on one stage at a time. For now lets focus on Plenum design and worry about intake runners later: If I'm understanding you correctly you are telling me that a diverging-converging (Air-> TB: As air inters the divergence portion of the plenum the air will slow down according to thermodynamics: A/A*=1/M[(2/(k+1))(1+(k-1)/2*m^2)]^((k+1)/(2*(k-1)))Since it's air, k=1.4 and M<=0.6 the formula will give you A/A* for the divergence. (Note: A- Area when gas inters, A* When gas is at M speed) If the pressure drop is significant enough the temperature will drop, but flow speed will suffer as it drops down in mach number. Knowing what the temperature will drop to we can solve for velocity using Ve=sqrt(k*R*Te)Note: There is a conversion factor in here (and this will end up in metric units) Now you mentioned something about a baffle or is that not needed in a rotary application? Do we even need a Divergence-Convergence Plenum, or is it just a simple matter of getting a big enough pipe and sticking a throttle body on the end of it? Aside: Can anyone scan a lower intake gasket for a 6PI and take a single measurement for me? I wish to be accurate and start a digital construction of the intake system so when I have access to CFD I'll be able to accurately see where potential flow issues are. Thanks
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 01-30-2010 at 11:56 AM.. |
01-31-2010, 12:10 AM | #11 |
The quest for more torque
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Be careful applying Speed-of sound math here... If you do a good job on the plenum, you should be able to mostly ignore the effects of the compressibility of the air. Most of your resonance tuning is due to the Helmholtz effect (AKA: organ pipe, more of a dynamic systems model than anything to do the compressibility). The air in the plenum should not be moving anywhere near the speed of sound.
Don't think about this too hard man, intake manifold are simpler than they would initially seem. Don't ever try a dynamic model on a manifold unless you are a glutton for punishment (I have tried it, it is not easy). Basically, your air velocity will follow the offset-sinusoidal waveform typical of an infinite-length-connecting-rod reciprocating engine (or a rotary, which has similar characteristics). The pressure drop at each transition is easily determined by using the lookup tables in the back of your fluids book, no difficult math required. Basically, you can get easy cross-sectional area requirements by taking the peak flow into the chamber and dividing it by the desired velocity (no rocket science there). With the plenum, everyone has their own idea as to how bast power is obtained. I won't take to time required to explain my opinion on that. As I said before, you can easily find the flow through any given portion of the manifold at any given time with reasonable accuracy. I will venture to say that I have seen tapered plenums, log plenums, cross rams, tunnel rams, inboard velocity stacks, tapered tubes, straight tubes, etc. in operation and I have not seen the simple log with beveled, constant cross-sectional area runners beat yet. I hope this helps some. I know that math is awesome, but don't let it bog you down. Seriously, I found that going by my intuition and what feels right is often better than trying to crunch crazy numbers, there are too many x-factors to make any good simulations given the typical person's toolbox. Edit: I hunted high and low for an intake manifold gasket and only succeeded in concluding that it is high time to clean out the garage (I know I have two brand-new ones, somewhere). Can I take a scan of a LIM for you? (I can find that...) What measurement do you need?
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1986 GXL ('87 4-port NA - Haltech E8, LS2 Coils. Defined Autoworks Headers, Dual 2.5" Exhaust (Dual Superflow, dBX mufflers) 1991 Coupe (KYB AGX Shocks, Eibach lowering springs, RB exhaust, Stock and Automatic) Last edited by NoDOHC; 01-31-2010 at 12:37 AM.. |
01-31-2010, 12:23 PM | #12 | ||||||
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Basically Dreal/Dscale=Dreal/Dscale: 10.5mm/1.25mm=Dreal/8.9mm; Dreal=74.76
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group Last edited by vex; 01-31-2010 at 12:27 PM.. |
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02-01-2010, 11:05 PM | #13 |
The quest for more torque
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CFD software is outside my experience, but if it is capable of simulating the flow in the manifold accurately (assuming that it is given good data) you have an excellent opportunity to maximize your learning as you go, while using the resources that you have to their fullest potential.
As you said, you do not have the typical toolbox. Helmholtz tuning works for any level of boost (it is basically the natural frequency of resonance of the fluid system). The speed of sound varies with density of the charge, so you will have to that into account on the Helmholtz equation. You can write the Helmholtz equation most easily in terms of the resonance frequency (First equation) Solved for L gives the second equation. This expects a uniform cross-sectional area for the runner, as any changes in velocity will create additional and possibly conflicting pressure waves. (a = speed of sound, V = velocity in the runner at time of wave excitation, L = Runner length from source to plenum, A = cross sectional area of runner, f = frequency of resonance (which is related to engine speed, obviously). I hope this helps some. With the tools at your disposal, this should be one awesome manifold. The offset sinusoid expresses the chamber volume as a function of E-shaft rotation (the period is 270 degrees, the amplitude is 20 in3 (327 cc) (654 cc peak to peak). Taking the derivative with respect to time requires that the x axis be in time units (pick an engine rpm). This will give you the rate of change of chamber volume with respect to time, which should give you a good velocity characteristic (given port cross-sectional area). Hopefully this will be good enough input data to get a reasonable approximation of how the manifold will flow. Keep up the good work!
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1986 GXL ('87 4-port NA - Haltech E8, LS2 Coils. Defined Autoworks Headers, Dual 2.5" Exhaust (Dual Superflow, dBX mufflers) 1991 Coupe (KYB AGX Shocks, Eibach lowering springs, RB exhaust, Stock and Automatic) |
02-01-2010, 11:10 PM | #14 | |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |
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02-02-2010, 01:58 PM | #15 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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Okay, I'm working with the formula's you gave me and I've got it narrowed down a little bit. I have found at least two parts where the pressure will affect the runner length:
The amount of air displaced (when calculating the velocity in the runners), and the speed of sound propagation (sqrt(gamma*R*T)). Temperature and Gamma may change with an increase in pressure. I'll post up the full formula I have when I've got the little details worked out.
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The Official FC Radiator Thread My Project Thread: Cerberus CCVT Virginia Rotary Group |