by blaktopr » Wed May 20, 2009 6:14 pm
I have found wet testing gave me answers to many questions. Things become more clear when you get to the why.
Flow patterns would probably be different when using smoke because it has less mass.
I have found separation problems that would have been left not adressed if not using these means. I confirmed this talking to other head porters who do this for a living (nobody high end)
You get to understand pressure differentials inside the port and chamber.
You start to understand how the pressure recovery in the cylinder can effect airflow through the port.
You can see the trend of why there are complete or incomplete burn in the chamber.
You can see the effects of different valve seat angles.
You can study the effects a "heavier" mixture has at higher velocities. Whether or not the port can still handle it.
You can see where puddleing can occur in the port or chamber.
Why a particular combo needed more or less spark advance. Was it chamber shape or port shape that made the difference.
What a sharper/ thinner/ wider valve margin causes.
Carb spacer design and its effects on signal and pressure recovery.
Booster design, and how it meters fuel
There are some off the top of my head. There was an article in Drag Racer (?) talking about Dart's bench. My friend read it to me over the phone. He was stunned by two things.
1. That a wet test system can be built at home for cheap compared to the Dart bench.
2. That everything I told him I found through my testing and speculations I made were stated in the article. By Dart and used in PS racing to find gains.
They are developing heads using this medium. Now I was thinking about what are we gonna do with it. Once I finish the attachment and motor box, my testing will be in full swing again. Just as John was mentioning, I will be looking into measuring and flow testing not just with cfm, but the converted necessary LBS of air and fuel for the target HP level the head is intended for. Once I get some kind of working prototypes together and see if there is info to be found, I am going to work with Bruce and others on this site to try to develop a way for the flow computer to also read and control the liquid medium and work it to LBS for mass readouts. So you would get readouts of cfm, lbs/min, AF in relation to the bench's air/fuel reading, in relationship to the HP target you are testing.
Once static is higher than 28" on my bench, the whole test will be documented usid fluid and air through the whole test for the numbers. Then visual tests to see what other issues to be addressed.
I'm not letting Dart have all the fun.
Chris.
Chris Sikorski