by Tony » Thu May 10, 2007 2:51 am
Welcome to the Forum LEVAS.
We have other posters here for which English is not their first language. It can sometimes be a little difficult, but we can still communicate.
bpowell,
There are several rather fundamental problems with the original design that unfortunately you are just now discovering. Leakage is one, the orifice flow coefficients changes when the airflow direction is reversed, but the biggest problem by far, is that the measurement orifice will be flowing highly disturbed turbulent air from the test hole.
It is unfortunate that the measurement orifice has been placed directly below, and directly in line with the test hole. Any swirls, eddies or turbulence from the test hole will effect the orifice flow coefficient in an unpredictable way. There is no quick fix either, but as Larry says you have definitely come to the right place.
Others here have had similar problems and there are ways to improve the design, but I will leave that to people with more direct personal experience with your style of bench.
But in a nutshell, an orifice flow coefficient is only predictable if the air upstream flowing into the orifice is completely undisturbed. Very turbulent air can either increase or hinder flow, and the resulting pressure drop across the measurement orifice can become highly unpredictable and inconsistent.
The usual symptom of the problem is that the measured flow increments have no obvious consistent relationship to orifice size increments.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.