TravisR
Automotive
- Oct 15, 2005
- 23
I have really tried to pin down runner inlets for combustion engines in order to reduce the coefficient of discharge. I can't quite put my thumb on optimal though and would like any help or expertise you can offer.
Here is what I've found...(I think)
Round bell mouths exponentially reduce runner area, meaning velocity must exponentially increase as it moves into the runner. This causes air to accelerate toward the center of the runner where the air gains too great of a velocity to remain any amount of Newtonian. Having insufficient viscosity to then resist this movement of high velocity air to the middle it compresses the air in the middle of the runner and disassociates it from the edges of the runner. This causes the eddy's on the side of the runner which impede flow.
Exponential bell mouths (hyperbolic or elliptical) allow you to precisely control the velocity in each axis. The real question is, how much velocity in each axis can the runner accept before disassociation from the wall occurs.
Lastly what does runner entry geometry have to do with specifically efficiency of flow? On most 4 valve heads the head at least starts as an oval. So I was contemplating making the runner and the throttle body oval as well. From a CFD perspective it seems to not make that much difference, but real world maybe quite different. Is there a standard number of inches in which the efficiency of the transfer from round to oval is worth the friction of using a runner the same shape as the head?
If it is more efficient to run an oval shape over my distance (about 5 inches) then....
Realistically having the bell mouth a shape that gives a larger perimeter to area ratio would have what effect? Differentially thinking this means for every piece of air that flows over the perimeter it should move slower with a larger perimeter and then it is accelerated into the air stream by the shear forces from the middle. Too much area and the flow is mixed into eddy's at the edges and alot of energy is wasted...
I have a lot of half truths and thinking here and I'm striving for the full truths, anyone want to set me straight?
Here is what I've found...(I think)
Round bell mouths exponentially reduce runner area, meaning velocity must exponentially increase as it moves into the runner. This causes air to accelerate toward the center of the runner where the air gains too great of a velocity to remain any amount of Newtonian. Having insufficient viscosity to then resist this movement of high velocity air to the middle it compresses the air in the middle of the runner and disassociates it from the edges of the runner. This causes the eddy's on the side of the runner which impede flow.
Exponential bell mouths (hyperbolic or elliptical) allow you to precisely control the velocity in each axis. The real question is, how much velocity in each axis can the runner accept before disassociation from the wall occurs.
Lastly what does runner entry geometry have to do with specifically efficiency of flow? On most 4 valve heads the head at least starts as an oval. So I was contemplating making the runner and the throttle body oval as well. From a CFD perspective it seems to not make that much difference, but real world maybe quite different. Is there a standard number of inches in which the efficiency of the transfer from round to oval is worth the friction of using a runner the same shape as the head?
If it is more efficient to run an oval shape over my distance (about 5 inches) then....
Realistically having the bell mouth a shape that gives a larger perimeter to area ratio would have what effect? Differentially thinking this means for every piece of air that flows over the perimeter it should move slower with a larger perimeter and then it is accelerated into the air stream by the shear forces from the middle. Too much area and the flow is mixed into eddy's at the edges and alot of energy is wasted...
I have a lot of half truths and thinking here and I'm striving for the full truths, anyone want to set me straight?