You'd be surprised the number of guys secretly hopping on the higher compression bandwagon,,,, tractor and truck guys alike,,,,,,
Giving up HP with lower compression is false information. Sorry, theres alittle machine shop down south that has dynoed engines back to back and actually gained horse power on the same engine with NO changes except pistons. They lowered the compression and gained power
Giving up HP with lower compression is false information. Sorry, theres alittle machine shop down south that has dynoed engines back to back and actually gained horse power on the same engine with NO changes except pistons. They lowered the compression and gained power
Giving up HP with lower compression is false information. Sorry, theres alittle machine shop down south that has dynoed engines back to back and actually gained horse power on the same engine with NO changes except pistons. They lowered the compression and gained power
You'd be surprised the number of guys secretly hopping on the higher compression bandwagon,,,, tractor and truck guys alike,,,,,,
And are they accomplishing anything with it?
I know and talk with a lot of the owners of the strongest dmaxes in the country, and Cummins alike. None of the top runners are running high cr.
People have been playing with it for a couple years, and they don't seem to be geyting any closer to the top of the pack.
Interesting facts to consider:
The displacement is not affected by CR
A 16:1 CR chamber leaves about 10% more dead air in the chamber than a 17.5 CR chamber after exhausting. (~4.5 cc)
Fingers, have you found any correlations between CR and chamber pressures?
I know it's tough as it not easily feasible to rip apart a motor and just change CR with no other changes, but just wondering if the the pressure spikes seem to be affected by higher CR? I think it's safe to ASSume a higher CR would produce a higher chamber pressure, but are the rates of increasing and/or decreasing pressure different. If my thinking is correct, pressures within the cylinder would have to increase/decrease at a faster rate given a specific RPM when CR is higher.
Different cams would have an effect on chamber pressure (overlap and possible bleed off....at least on gasser engines, I have zero experience with turbo diesel cams) as well as the amount of force fed air and fuel, but didn't know if any "generalizations" can be made by looking at graphs from different motors.
Fingers, have you found any correlations between CR and chamber pressures?
I know it's tough as it not easily feasible to rip apart a motor and just change CR with no other changes, but just wondering if the the pressure spikes seem to be affected by higher CR? I think it's safe to ASSume a higher CR would produce a higher chamber pressure, but are the rates of increasing and/or decreasing pressure different. If my thinking is correct, pressures within the cylinder would have to increase/decrease at a faster rate given a specific RPM when CR is higher.
Different cams would have an effect on chamber pressure (overlap and possible bleed off....at least on gasser engines, I have zero experience with turbo diesel cams) as well as the amount of force fed air and fuel, but didn't know if any "generalizations" can be made by looking at graphs from different motors.
What c/r are you guys considering high?