I've been looking to make an engine dyno for a while now and after reading posts here I was ringing around some truck wreckers to try and find a telma retarder. When I explained what I wanted it for the bloke I was talking to said he had an old water brake chassis dyno that I could have for $500. Apparently it has had new seals etc fitted at some stage but they just dont use it any more. My plan is to use the water brake from this dyno as the power absorber and maybe upgrade to an electronic load cell to measure the torque.
I take it from looking around a bit on the net that these are still used and seem to work well. Space is not an issue and either is making up the chassis to mount the engine etc.
To measure power from what I have learnt you use the formula:
power(in hp) = torque(in lbs-ft) x rpm/5252
(I hope thats right, everything I learnt was in metric units, kW, Nm, radians)
So all I need to do is measure how quickly the engine accelerates against a certain torque? What I am wondering is do you need to keep the torque constant and how do you do this?
Also, has anyone had much to do with a water brake setup and is there anything I need to look out for when I go and look at it?
One other thing I was thinking of was to mount a flywheel/flexplate and starter motor on the water brake end so I dont have to fiddle around trying to mount bellhousings and starters to engines without block mounted starters. Does anyone see any problems doing it this way? I suppose the weight of the flywheel will be extra weight for the engines to turn but I suppose this can be factored out in the calculations?
Last thing (this is turning into an essay rather than a post!), does anyone know of an affordable computer sensor/software setup for reading and calculation?