by vanirv6 » Sat Apr 23, 2005 2:07 pm
Larry,
I think you've missed my point. Granted, everything you say has certain merit. However, the one thing that is missing in your equation is tangent technologies like engine simulation software. I'm not talking about low-end bits like Desktop Dyno and the like. I'm talking about packages like Dynomation and WAVE that rely heavily on flow figures based on Superflow numbers. Unless you are willing to skew/adjust/manipulate your numbers to correlate with the Superflow numbers, you can't really rely on the outputs of these programs with the confidence that you would expect.
My intention was to point out what may be a "stacked tolerance" condition (perhaps intentional) that has an inherent _potential_ flaw. By ignoring it, that flaw is introduced into every subsequent operation that in any way depends on a "real" CFM number. Scientifically speaking, this is no way to conduct tests. You make mention of the accuracy of the Superflow bench. I ask: accurate compared to what standard?
I'd like to think that many here (not all) are motivated to try to achieve something more than what we are given as "standard". More capacity, more resolution, more repeatability, more accuracy..........more. Others are here to learn and understand more about what the art of flowbench construction is about, and that's great too. However, fundamentally, much of the critical discussion on this board has roots based in what Superflow does and what Superflow says and how our machines compare to Superflow. Some have abandoned the Superflow comparison long ago (Tony comes to mind) but almost anyone that has endeavored to build the MSD-style bench has encountered at least two common issues related to this design: 1) the orifices in the articles don't make sense and 2) the configuration of the inclined flow scale. Invariably, there are two solutions to question #1 that are commonly suggested and those are to build test orifices and have the flowed on a Superflow for comparison (and there is the problem) or base all of your orifice flows on purely calculated numbers of which there are now several iterations. All I'm saying is that evidently, neither option is particularly good depending on how you look at it. If you want to use the available software as it exists, you correlate to a Superflow bench no matter what inaccuracy may be or you base everything on calculated numbers (by picking your favorite equation) and live with numbers that are not directly comparable to any other machine and preclude their reliability with modern software (for example).
In the end, this is probably another strong reason to try to standardize this whole deal ourselves. As suggested elsewhere on this forum, the pitot tube bench guys can get together and establish their standards and the orifice plate bench guys can do the same. The only thing I'm saying is that we should be very careful to not assume the "standard of the industry" is worthy of the title. Perhaps the only thing worth considering in this context is the use of the same orifice diameters for each range and the inverse square law flow scale (0-100%) and that's it?
Just more to think about.
Vanirv6
Sven Pruett