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Stealth Pilot wrote:
On Mon, 02 Jun 2008 19:51:47 -0400, dave hillstrom wrote: On Mon, 2 Jun 2008 14:12:26 -0700 (PDT), Tony wrote: Ram air is only as useful the allowing air to get to your carburater faster but is not necessarily used. When your piston is on its intake stroke(vaccum) your combustion chamber can only draw in enough air that is in conjuction to the chambers volume and all other air that is present after the compression stroke is exported to engines smog devices and is recirculated only AFTER being filtered. All engines come off the assembly lines, be it an airplane motor or a vehicle motor, to draw the amount of air that it needs to run at opptimum performance. Ram Air is a myth and don't try to throw "turbo" into the conversation because turbo is recircualted exhaust and still has unburnt fuel in the fumes. I think you are quite wrong. Ram air in fact gives us a half inch or so more manifold pressure, and that increases the total weight of the air-fuel mixture in the cylinder. Reduce your 'it doesn't matter argument to an extreme to see how it fails. As for turbos, the turbine is powered by the exhaust gasses coming from the engine, the exhaust gas itself is not reintroduced into the cylinders. The turbine itself could be powered by an electric motor, for that matter. That was the model for my tongue in cheek comment about using a shop vac to increase manifold pressure. will you marry me? dave the term is not foo and bar. foo *is* a term from another war and another airforce but the term you've so successfully stuffed up is fubar fubar is a vietnam era acronym of F***ed up beyond all recognition. your sig line is a snafu (situation normal all F***ed up) Yore 'rong. foo and bar are metasyntactic variables. They aren't acronyms (they're metasyntactic variables). Like being the John and Jane Doe of computer engineering - placeholders. Fubar predates WWII. -- nuts |
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