by jsa » Mon Mar 23, 2009 9:11 pm
Turbo motors like smaller ports than NA motors. The reason is velocity limit related.
The speed of sound limits the maximum port velocity, and the flowbench velocity target is some percentage of that maximum.
In terms of m/s of ft/s, the speed of sound (mach 1) inside the port/manifolding is different to the speed of sound outside the port/manifolding/engine/engine bay/car. Both locations are still mach 1 but the m/s or ft/s value of mach 1 is quite different.
We test on a bench at ~14.7psia +/- about 1 PSI in most cases.
Your engine sees ~14.7+8=~22.7psia. That extra 8psi and different air temps, changes the speed of sound inside the ports significantly enough for the flowbench measured target port velocity to be increased over what the NA goal is.
Don't be to concerned that CFM on the bench drops with an increase in velocity, typically the speed limit, measured in ft/s or m/s, has increased in a running turbo application.
Just my opinion at this moment in time.
Cheers
John