by Tony » Sun Mar 01, 2009 11:45 pm
A wastegate is almost always a poppet valve, not a butterfly valve.
The flow area of a butterfly valve is highly non linear with the opening angle. Any non linearity hugely complicates the design and tuning of the dyno closed loop speed/load feedback system.
Basically you do not need to know (or care) what the pressure or flow is going into the water brake, or how far the control valve is actually open, except that there is enough water flow to prevent boiling at full maximum power.
You dial up (say) 4,000 rpm and then open the engine throttle. The engine speed rapidly increases, and then the water valve opens up just far enough to hold exactly 4,000 rpm. The engine speed/load feedback system opens the water supply just far enough to hold the required set 4,000 rpm speed exactly.
The set speed may be constant, or it may slowly sweep upwards at a desired fixed rate.
Water flow is always determined by the outlet restriction.
In other words, if the drum needs to be half full to hold the engine, water flow could be one gallon per minute, or 200 gallons per minute. When the water volume going in equals the water volume forcing its way out past the outlet restriction, then the water level in the drum will remain constant.
So flow is actually set by the outlet restriction. The wastegate only opens far enough to hold the water level in the drum constant at the required level to hold the torque from the engine.
For it to do this, the water valve needs to respond quickly, smoothly, and open (and close) in a very progressive manner.
It is a bit like like driving down the road at exactly 50 mph. You never need to know how far open the throttle is to do that. You just watch your speed, and give it a bit more, or a bit less throttle. A dyno is the same. How far open the water valve is, is of no real interest. The speed/load control system just gives it a bit more water, or a bit less water, to vary the load, to hold the required exact set speed.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.