by gofaster » Sat Nov 04, 2006 5:45 pm
If you have a 7.5 h.p. electric motor available, maybe you could bolt it and the blower to something solid (like a sturdy work bench) and see what happens next. You'd need to decide whether you want to make a belt system or a nose to nose drive coupling arrangement.
Those blowers are gear driven, about 2:1 on a diesel engine @ approx. 1500 to 2000 engine rpm, if memory serves me. Haven't touched one in almost 20 years now. An 8V92 blower is literally feeding a V-8, 2-stroke, diesel engine, that displaces 92 cubic inches per cylinder, a 736 cubic inch total displacement 2 stroke. They only have exhaust valves in the heads, no intake valves. Intake air enters through ports in the cylinders when the pistons uncover them. The engine needs the blower to supply cylinder air fill and aid in blow down. Just replacing the base displacement of 736 cu.in. on every revolution (2-stroke) and not allowing for the extra volume needed to assist blow down, @ 1700 rpm, your looking at over 700 cfm. That's a lot of air!
If you decide to play with this baby, please be careful not to get near the inlet when you run it, and don't fully block the openings with anything. Putting something over the inlet is dangerous and crazy, please don't fool around there. The outlet can be throttled by something sturdy, but again, don't block it tight. Probably safer to waste gate it, less heat anyway. Be aware of rotation. When looking into the inlet, the rotors should appear to emerge from the center of the blower and separate towards the outer walls. When they meet at the bottom the air is discharged. The bearings will need some sort of lubrication provision, too.
If you proceed, please keep us posted. It'll be quite an air mover!
Jim