by 84-1074663779 » Sun Nov 28, 2004 7:02 pm
I have no practical experience of this myself, but from what I have read between the lines, there is no particular universal best figure to aim for.
It is all about setting up the most favorable conditions for optimum combustion. Swirl is just one factor along with chamber shape, cylinder bore, valve layout, squish, plug placement, compression ratio, fuel burn characteristics, rod ratio, ignition timing, and probably your astrological sign.
The trick seems to be to get it to burn in the shortest time while still maintaining reliable combustion stability. If you can achieve that, you may be able to safely run a slightly higher compression ratio, and it will probably require less ignition advance. This is not easy. The larger the cylinder bore, and the higher the Rpm, the more critical it becomes.
I believe you are supposed to do extensive dynamometer testing to decide what combination works best in your particular engine family, and then measure swirl to give some sort of reference number that you can return to. It is just an attempt to isolate one factor from all the rest. The swirl number by itself in isolation probably does not mean much.
The people that really know are not likely to tell you either.
And I certainly do NOT know. I wish I did !