Unfortunately, that is not a good analogy. You are comparing an open system to a closed which does not account for the close quarters, limited heat available and ignition process that exist in the chamber. So on and so forth, blah, blah, blah. We can theorize it to death.
From the little that I have done on my engine and the CP rig, the larger injectors are more sensitive to timing changes than stock. I look forward to the day when others can add their 2 cents worth based on their own logging.
One thing I do not have a handle on is how much more CP, if any, is needed to generate X HP with stock VS bigger injectors. After all, THAT is what we are after. Max HP with Min CP. Right?
But, what do I know...
Outstanding Chris.
Lite a match and spray diesel on it at 15 gallons a minute and 60psi. Light a match and spray diesel through a pressure washer at 4 gallons a minute and 4kpsi. If the match doesn't blow out because of the air displaced with the spray of the pressure washer, which method would burn the fuel.
5 gallons of diesel in a bucket has less surface area around the fuel than 5 gallons of diesel sprayed into the air under high pressure. If the air space does not become saturated then kaboom.
We're not talking about ground beef vs. pot roast though...
We're talking about a common rail diesel. Assume pressure is the same in both scenario's. Yes the smaller hole is going to atomize better that's a given. That nozzle can only deliver x amount of fuel per "on" time. So you open the nozzle longer. Say you look at cylinder pressure rise under boost yet you don't inject any fuel into the cylinder. Now on that graph suppose there is a point where cylinder pressure is highest, which means the most available oxygen in the smallest space, with the highest cylinder temp available. Isn't that where you would want to spray your fuel. (Assume that the stock nozzle is 100% atomization efficiency) Say my 45% larger nozzle is only 80% efficient by comparison.
The larger nozzle is going to have a much better chance getting "ALL" the fuel into the cylinder at peak cylinder pressure/temp than the stocker spraying before peak and after peak as the piston is traveling up (negative torque) and down the cylinder (expanding chamber volume).
Why did the LB7 have a larger nozzle? Better yet why did they downsize? I would guess emissions, not power.
Brayden
We're not talking about ground beef vs. pot roast though...
We're talking about a common rail diesel. Assume pressure is the same in both scenario's. Yes the smaller hole is going to atomize better that's a given. That nozzle can only deliver x amount of fuel per "on" time. So you open the nozzle longer. Say you look at cylinder pressure rise under boost yet you don't inject any fuel into the cylinder. Now on that graph suppose there is a point where cylinder pressure is highest, which means the most available oxygen in the smallest space, with the highest cylinder temp available. Isn't that where you would want to spray your fuel. (Assume that the stock nozzle is 100% atomization efficiency) Say my 45% larger nozzle is only 80% efficient by comparison.
The larger nozzle is going to have a much better chance getting "ALL" the fuel into the cylinder at peak cylinder pressure/temp than the stocker spraying before peak and after peak as the piston is traveling up (negative torque) and down the cylinder (expanding chamber volume).
Why did the LB7 have a larger nozzle? Better yet why did they downsize? I would guess emissions, not power.
Brayden
Do you have any steak preparing tips to add? I prefer grilled preparation instructions. Although, I only want the proven recipes and I don't care nor accept any based on experience.
Got STEAK?
Kurt, you know I don't have time to wait till the charcoal gets to just the right temp and all. Heck, I hadn't even had time to catch up on the forum. I just turn the propane on and throw the steak on. How have you been bud? Nice to hear from you as well.
Uhh.. Yeah.. I have such a dish right here.. a steak that most people have failed to cook properly. Mine seems to be done just right.. Medium rare.. Not overdone.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNETZZuBjjM
Has anybody had an LBZ not crack pistons at this hp level?
http://www.fleeceperformance.com/Media/Jerrod_64mm_Cheetah_at_TS2.mpg
Same steak.. Well prepared.. Cooked at "HIGH HEAT" for a "SHORT DURATION" to sear in the juices and keep the good stuff where it's supposed to be Inside the bowl
Get it now?
Brayden