by Tony » Tue Jan 31, 2006 7:04 pm
Ah ! The penny has dropped. I think I now finally understand what is really being discussed here. Sorry, I am a bit slow sometimes guys !!
As I understand it, a ratiometric orifice flow bench will always come up the same CFM figure for the same test object no matter what the atmospheric conditions. That is an excellent way to test, but it may not really reflect the true real CFM airflow on the day.
It is exactly like measuring the CFM through a running engine on a dyno. Colder air will flow more mass, and produce more power. And it may also do something similar on a flow bench. It will flow different masses of real air under different ambient conditions.
So what exactly does that tell us ?
I would much rather know that a certain port configuration measures as a very repeatable exact 100 CFM on my bench every time I tested it.
It may actually flow 98 CFM one day, and 102 CFM the next because the weather has changed, but how does knowing that actually help us ?
Surely the whole aim of a flow bench is to come up with a figure of merit for a test object that is repeatable and easy to measure with a minimum of introduced errors.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.