blanchard7684
Member
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2024
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The expression says power is proportional to displacement and inversely proportional to afr.UM, no , not even close.
Lets review. Your linked power equation shows that power is equal to a bunch of efficiencies (slide of terms coming up if needed) and fuel flow.
The red box terms in the the numerator of the the mass flowrate of fuel equation are in the numerator of the power equation, and the blue boxed terms in the denominator of the mass fuel flowrate equation and in the denotator of the power equation.
For ease of reference, lets compare the terms in the red and blue colored boxes to each other, respective colored box,,, spoiler alert,,they're the same.
View attachment 447618
So that leaves these terms in the numerator of the power equation( that you linked).
View attachment 447619
So lets examine what those remaining terms in that numerator are again;
View attachment 447620
Its a bunch of efficiency terms and another fuel term,,,so your power equation says power is equal to the various efficiencies, times a fuel heating term, times fuel mass flowrate.
So, if you change any one of the terms in either the red or blue boxes, you also change the mass flowrate of fuel,,,you know fuel,,,where the power comes from.
...
You circled it. Literally.
You are simply working through a valid derivation , term by term. You aren’t changing the validity of the final expression.
Critiquing how the other variables on right hand side will not change this fact.
If I tell you force is equal to mass times acceleration, then redefine accel in terms of momentum ,and redefine mass in terms of density and volume, It doesn’t change the validity of either final expression nor any of the preceding expressions.
This is substitution of terms.
Dancing around this doesn’t change the fact that the final expression says exactly what I said it did.