BretCahill
Mechanical
- Jan 14, 2005
- 17
I can usually find my "new" ideas in minutes and they are often decades old. This might be an exception:
Eliminate turbo lag and shaft driven superchargers with something much more useful to most commuters: a two to 5 second burst of air from a pressure vessel that would help scoot any under powered vehicle across a busy intersection and into traffic.
For, say, a 2 l engine an 8 gallon air tank would hold 8 cubic feet STP at 120 psi or 13 ft^3 at 200 psi. This should be more than enough boost air for drivers waiting at intersections running at low initial rpm. Since this system wouldn't be used to burn rubber at every stop light a small compressor would recharge between "situations." You stomp the gas, solenoids open and you have power the once or twice a day -- or month -- you need it.
The advantages over turbo and super charging are many obvious:
No power is sapped from the crank shaft and no back pressure -- assuming the tank system wasn't combined with turbo charging to over come turbo lag.
The intercooler effect would be enormous, delivering sub ambient temperature air. The air might even require some warming.
A venturi [jet pump] or some other means could use the energy from the expanging air to suck in outside air for a smaller tank or lower pressure or longer boost time or all three.
The boost pressure could be higher without damaging the engine because it would only last a few seconds.
The boost pressure could be easily adjusted any time with the air regulator.
The system is cheap, simple and off the shelf.
Unlike a supercharger, the tank could be located anywhere space isn't critical.
Bret Cahill
Eliminate turbo lag and shaft driven superchargers with something much more useful to most commuters: a two to 5 second burst of air from a pressure vessel that would help scoot any under powered vehicle across a busy intersection and into traffic.
For, say, a 2 l engine an 8 gallon air tank would hold 8 cubic feet STP at 120 psi or 13 ft^3 at 200 psi. This should be more than enough boost air for drivers waiting at intersections running at low initial rpm. Since this system wouldn't be used to burn rubber at every stop light a small compressor would recharge between "situations." You stomp the gas, solenoids open and you have power the once or twice a day -- or month -- you need it.
The advantages over turbo and super charging are many obvious:
No power is sapped from the crank shaft and no back pressure -- assuming the tank system wasn't combined with turbo charging to over come turbo lag.
The intercooler effect would be enormous, delivering sub ambient temperature air. The air might even require some warming.
A venturi [jet pump] or some other means could use the energy from the expanging air to suck in outside air for a smaller tank or lower pressure or longer boost time or all three.
The boost pressure could be higher without damaging the engine because it would only last a few seconds.
The boost pressure could be easily adjusted any time with the air regulator.
The system is cheap, simple and off the shelf.
Unlike a supercharger, the tank
Bret Cahill