David I will take this in parts,
maineSS wrote:Don't know what's happening exactly, it seems if you exceed a certain time, you're automatically logged out, and lose your post. I'm going to try posting/editing as I write instead of waiting till the end... .
I have reviewed your posts and see where you might be having trouble it appears you are using a public computer (extreme randomness in IP Address) and this is often a situation with these types of public system configurations. Are you using a computer at a public or institutional facility in Biddeford? As I suggested before compose your longer messages in a text editor then just cut and past.
maineSS wrote:Let's start at "Inside, you will have a region of organized flow between the inlet and orifice, surrounded by a "tube" of recirculating air trapped within the confines of the box. It's similar to what you'll see in a river- downstream flow is out in the main channel, eddies and backflow close to the banks. "Orifice in a box" looks like "orifice in a tube"- it seems quite doubtful the ideal sideways flow into the orifice will occur in a box that's not room-sized. .
Orifice in a box is an orifice in a tube but designed to have a beta ratio high enough to have little or no effect. In fact flow in the box is like flow in the river except it is flow in a river approaching a DAM or Black Hole depending on flow direction. The air is turbulent and slowing in speed in either chamber working toward rest (as the pressure differential changes) when it then organizes as it begins its journey toward the pressure differential, the internal orifice is a restriction that causes the increase/decrease in pressure between the two chambers. I do find it funny though that this design without extreme calibration using simple water gauges and a orifice CD derived form a book from the turn of the century can mathematically perform in a linear manor with accuracy within a couple percent of theoretical calculation. ????? When calibrated properly it can perform within 1 to 2% across an entire orifice range.
Again no one is telling you not to build your orifice in a tube, or maybe you are just looking to validate a purchase of product or a business, or even equipment you have.
maineSS wrote:Rick mentions placing a baffle before the orifice to prevent the incoming jet from the settling box from disrupting orifice inflow. This is a great example of "settling boxes" not settling much of anything- the jet from the bore adapter simply reforms at the exit of the settling box. When the jet hits this wall, the flow will have to boil up over it and fall down the other side. When a moving fluid drops abruptly from a higher elevation to a lower one, a cavity forms between the flow and the drop. This cavity is occupied by a turbulent roller of constantly changing size. What we end up with is a highly turbulent, pulsating flow directly in front of the orifice. You'll get the same effect if you hang the baffle from the top, side, whatever- forcing the flow to make a 90 deg turn will generate lots of turbulence in an area you really don't want it in. If you think I'm being overly dramatic, just make one wall of the box transparent, add smoke or streamers, and enjoy the show. The turbulence caused by PVC pipe irregularities will be minor by comparison.
PVC pipe has certain other qualities. It doesn't leak, and a tube equalizes stresses much better than boxlike shapes- which is why pressure-resistant items like cannon barrels and submarines tend to be totally tubular. For flowbench construction, it means no painting, no painstaking joinery, no leak chasing. You don't have to glue the joints- just run a bead of silicone round the cuff after the pipe is inserted, and cut it with a razor if later disassembly is required. .
One expects the air entering the BOX to be turbulent but the abrupt pressure changes begin to have and effect on this air causing mass chaos which in turn is similar to stagnant air. Unlike in a smaller pipe this air is not focused down steam it is migrating toward the pressure differential. If you want a good show take a wadd of ones and go watch the girls dance.
If you want to see the air as it approaches the orifice adhere streamers around the internal orifice on the side the air is approaching from and see what happens. Remember we do not care in the least what the air in the chamber is doing, only that the air approaching the orifice is at or near full flow.
Oh and yes I agree if you are looking to build something to test a 100” + an easy rout is pipe but you better glue it and understand the math and limitations of each flow element.
maineSS wrote:So far, Ive not heard any compelling reasons to abandon my wicked tubular ways, which have served my friend well these past 20+ years- he's made a lot of horsepower with his bench. I think a lot of your visitors are resistant to buying a set of plans when flowbench construction info is widespread nowdays- times have changed. Just about anything can be made to work, after a fashion, and you won't convert these people to customers by telling them their ideas are wrong (even if they are totally whacked out). What the handymen are really looking for is something they can't make themselves, and can't be downloaded for free- computerized data aquisition and data management. People don't want to squint at manometers trying to interpret flow readings, and customers aren't impressed by a couple lines of handwritten data. Expectations are higher today. .
No one on this forum will tell any one to abandon a project unless they truly do not understand what they are dealing with. Most will recommend buying the plans as it is an easy proven way to get us motorheads where we want to be and that is working or racing our Sh_t. All the information and a lot of knowledge is here on the forum but no one is going to do your homework for you, you do have to read.
maineSS wrote:Now the companies that serve this market are into the "system" approach, where both hardware and software have to be bought from one company, and you need to spend ~ $1000 to to get a functional system. This is OK for business users who need out-of-the-box performance, and can write the cost off as a tax expense. This market has gotten smaller in the past few years due to economic issues, and trying to enter it against companies who've had 20 years to gain position will be a hard row to hoe. I would think about making a digital manometer/software package that would more versatile and less costly than Superflow, Audie, or Performance Trends. If your manometer will plug and play with the "Big 3" software, and your software will play with their hardware, AND offer options like high-depression flow measurement, floating depression, fixed depression, beta ratio selection, the Big 3's customers wil start getting interested. If it costs $100 less, the Big 3 will begin to have a problem with customer retention. The experimenter crowd will also show interest, as you'd be the only game in town catering to their needs. Development in this direction will likely be much more rewarding than selling plans.
David, You have been poking a wound since you first posted here with obviously an underlying agenda of either self promotion or intentional discrediting of what goes on here on the forum. If you want controversy I say go play on YB if you want to talk flow benches and what you are going to build you are in the right place. If you do actually read the forum you will see we embrace many designs (follow the ivenhoee thread) and I only dispute self promoted theories of over discussed authors of books that tell us to purchase off the shelf parts to make more horsepower. Oh and did I mention he even gives Audie a BJ for a device he shows is off 12% against the BSI.
If your friend makes good power it is not from his flowbench but from what he learned about airflow, flowbenches have NO ability to make power they can only help you lean and validate your changes, Pito, Orifice in Pipe, Orifice in a Bax, Mass Air, FLE. These are all just tools.
FREE, LOL I am still waiting on a check I was promised 4 years ago, the only thing free is Knowledge. OH and did I mention that for FREE you can read the Flow Bench Tech forum and by the time you are done you should have enough knowledge to build a repeatable flowbench see it’s free. And yes I do understand you have to pay for plans to get access to the Secret hand shake club, but then the only thing in there is stuff about a design that is all wrong.
Business; Ahhhh Based on what I know about capitalism and business I would say I got a pretty good handle on it, I have three comments on what you have to say. One if you do not like how PTS/FBT works, design a flowbench, design a digital monometer or computer controlled interface, start a forum and have at it, that my son is the beauty of The American Dream. Free Enterprise. Two, If you are looking for “open source”, this is the place take charge start a thread start your designs and we all will contribute and embrace. Three, if you are of the current more youthful modern ilk you could then maybe start and Occupy Super Flow Movement.
In closing David, here on the forum we encourage good discussion and education, we all seam to value learning and sir you may have a lot to offer us here, but when you walk up to the cage and poke the lion with a stick you should expect the result. Share, Add Value contribute and you will find a good group of people.
Good day,
Rick