blanchard7684
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- Joined
- Dec 23, 2024
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The feet thing is hilarious.The pressure at BDC is a result how every many cubic feet of air you have trapped in a given size cylinder.
How that air got there, via what size throttle body, or intake valve , naturally aspirated or forced, is irrelevant to the the pressure it'll create once its in there.
Simply put, if you add "X" amount of cubic feet off air in a set volume, you'll get "Y" amount of pressure every time. Increase that volume, the pressure will go down for that same cubic feet of air (and the reverse is also true).
And to burn a given amount of fuel at the same ratio, you need the same cubic feet of air, not the same pressure, the same volume/ the same cubic feet.
Sorry you can't wrap you head around the idea. I can't wrap my head around the idea that there are women making millions of dollars selling pictures of their feet on the internet, but that doesn't mean it isn't true, or that it isn't happening, just means I can't understand it. It would appear the same goes for you understanding this issue I suppose.
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Bolded part isn't true here is why:
The pressure starts at a maximum of atmospheric and decreases from there.
At WOT you might get back to 90% VE. (Racing applications can get above 100% VE.) This is from acoustic tuning. You are tuning the pressure pulsations to coincide with the desired crank angle or crank position.
The pressure at BDC is highly dependent on pressure drops along the flow path. This is true for any system flowing a gas or liquid.
If you have a pipe of a gas with a pressure drop across it due to a valve, pressure on one side will be higher than the other side and this drop is dependent on the flow characteristics of the valve.
The air flow into an engine is no different.