Windle posted 03-12-99 01:11 PM
I would suppose the turbo supercharger is more efficient due to the fact
that it draws it energy from spent gasses which has more of a passive effect
on the engine where the mechanical blower draws its power from the kinetic
action of the engine itself thus decreasing efficiency. You dont realize
how much of an effect this has until you compare it to, say, turning on
your car's air conditioner while you are trying to drive uphill. Small toll
- big effect. Whereas the turbo would be more effectively using spent exhaust
gasses to drive the process and actually draw less power from the engine.
I've experemented with both systems on cars and the turbo in inherently
more efficient due to its design IMHO.
-Windle-
Bino posted 03-12-99 01:13 PM
The explanation I've heard (my Dad recently retired from teaching A&P
mechanics) is that a Turbo harnesses some of the energy of the expanding
exhaust gasses. A geared Supercharger is just another load on the crankshaft,
ultimately.
Also, in aircraft, operation across a range of engine speeds is far less
important than in a car, for instance. Most of the time, a plane's throttle
is not moving all that much.
Brian posted 03-12-99 02:32 PM
I also wondered about why the radial-engined a/c did worse at higher
alts. I think I remember reading somewhere that in the pacific, Corsairs
were used primarily at low and medium alts. while 38's or 40's flew top
cover (I guess this was earlier on in the theatre). This despite the turbo
in the Corsair's 18cylinder radial. Another thing is the FW190. I don't
think the 14-cylinder radial it had was turbocharged was it? I don't have
enough references to know for sure. Thus the 190 didn't do well higher up,
and this lead to the 190D and finally the Ta152. Both of these had inverted
V engines, liquid-cooled. But I don't remember off hand, were they turbo'ed?
If not, then we're back to the original question, why radials suffer at
high alts. vs. liquid cooled. I hope some more of you can comment on this
subject.
miko 2dashes posted 03-12-99 02:32 PM
Guys,
Your explanations have a big hole in it - the law of energy conservation.
The exhaust gasses are expelled from the cylinder. The piston acts as
a pump. The pressure of the gas opposes the piston movement. That is why
efficient exhaust system is important (ever saw a muffler on an aircraft?).
Any restriction put in the way of escaping gasses causes the pressure
in the chamber to decrease slower and piston to work harder expelling gasses
(since amount of work it has to perform expelling them is directly proportional
to pressure). The energy of exhaust gasses is in no way free. Even using
the heat causes longer pipes and greater resistance.
Now a neat simple mechanical system connected to the crankshaft should
be more efficient efficient than the same mechanical system connected to
the turbine (extra step, hence inefficiency) working in the worst environment
for any mechanical part - inside the hot exhaust pipe.
It would be more responsive, since as engine speeds up, the charger rotates
faster while the turbine would need time to accelerate. During that time
the engine would not get enough air, so it would not accelerate as fast
as it could.
My friend's Mazda Miata has mechanical charger installed with its custom
engine . I think it rates around 500hp, more then half of my T72's. No way
wil I let that maniac give me a ride!
On the other hand, aircraft and helicopter pilots try to keep RPM constant
at the optimal value while changing the propeller blade pitch. Same as vehicle
drivers shift gears to keep RPM constant. Also when a car is going uphill,
it works harder while RPM stays the same or even drops. But the engine definitely
needs more air. So while the pressure of exhaust gas increases with more
power, rpm stays the same.
May be that is why chargers are often porwered though the exhaust rather
then gear.
miko--
Kodiak posted 03-12-99 03:14 PM
Miko--,
One thing you may not have considered is the necessity of maintaining
some exhaust backpressure. For an internal combustion engine to operate
most efficiently (volumetric efficiency?) at least a short exhaust pipe
is required. That is the reason raceing automobiles have short carefully
sized pipes. You never see large zero restriction pipes/chambers used to
direct the gasses away from the engine. On a bracket car I used to run the
optimum length was about 24 inches.
Kodiak III./JG54
Bino posted 03-12-99 03:23 PM
Miko,
I disagree. A Turbo is more efficient precisely because it harnesses
the energy of the exhaust gasses, which continue to expand as and after
they exit the cylinder. While a Supe is indeed better at acceleration across
the mid-range because of the constant ratio of compressor speed to crank
speed (i.e. no "turbo lag"), a Turbo is better at the top end
due to its superior efficiency. For Le Mans, run a Turbo. For the Monte
Carlo Rallye, a Supe.
Y'see, the piston does not have to push on those hot exhaust gasses very
much at all to coax them out of the cylinder. Hot as they are, they expand
out of the cylinder very quickly once the valve is opened. Besides, ever
seen a "tuned" exhaust system? It is far more efficient, yet far
more "restrictive" than straight pipes.
bino-- <II./JG54> bino.warbirds.org
Lugnut posted 03-12-99 03:57 PM
Preamble: this is a half assed semi informed reply. I was recently reading
one of my multitude of WWII related magazines that I subscribe to (which
of course I can't find now)that covered the P47 and its predecessors (the
Seversky P35/36 models) in a fair amount of detail. Seversky knew early
on in the 1930s that the next airwar was going to be fought above 25,000
ft with big fast planes, not small TnB fighters. He had a lot of teething
pains with the concept, but ultimately, a turbo supercharger was the only
real combo that gave him the high alt performance he wanted out of the R-2800.
Part of it was based upon space considerations. As big as the P47 is, a
huge amount of its internal space is dedicated to the turbo supercharger
and its elaborate plumbing system, which resides in the back of the plane,
to the engine up front. I gather that a standard 2 stage supercharger falls
short in comparison, and having the turbo 10+ feet away from the radial
should impart some intercooling effect on exhaust gases, which would add
to its effeciency.
Although not an engineer, I would probably disagree with miko's assertion
that a blower is always more effiecent that a turbo for a given application.
I can't fathom that the back pressure from a turbo impellor creates greater
mechanical drag that a supercharger. Individual designs vary, but I was
under the impression that most superchargers wasted 20-30% of the HP increase
they provided from driving their internals.
Lugnut
"Hand me that Metric hammer, will ya?"
bjh posted 03-12-99 04:04 PM
Ok, so the idea being that harnessing the unspent energy from the exaust
gasses is net more efficient than a mechanical supercharger, despite possible
reductions in the exaust system efficiency. Still a little surprised by
this, and I had considered the possibility of "tuning" the turbo
like exausts but suspected that there would be limits with all of the ducting
etc. As usual, with all other things being equal they aren't. So taking
this a bit further, a turbo is more efficient, but which weighs more? And
what's the physical size difference?
However, no one has yet answered the first part of my question yet though.
Why are inlines apparently less altitude sensitive than radials when both
are normally aspirated? Or have I been misled?
-bjh--
Squad Leader
VMF-58 Wildcards Rogue Squadron
funked posted 03-12-99 04:23 PM
Here's the deal on mechanical superchargers versus turbosuperchargers.
There is no discussion of altitude effects because I don't know jack about
that:
In general turbosuperchargers are more efficient. This doesn't mean they
make more power. By definition it means they make more power for a given
fuel consumption rate.
The reason is that the kinetic and thermal energy of the exhaust flow
is discarded on a normally-aspirated or mechanically-supercharged engine,
but on a turbo engine this energy is reclaimed and used to compress the
intake charge. As bino-- explained, the back pressure is not a big deal.
The added power from the compressed intake charge more than compensates
for this effect.
Not only does the mechanically supercharged engine throw the exhaust
energy away, but it leetches power off the crankshaft!
With both systems, increasing the engine speed will make the compressor
run faster and pump more air into the intake ports.
But if we hold at a constant engine speed, the turbosupercharger has
the advantage. Exhaust energy increases with power output at a given engine
speed. So the more power the engine produces, the more exhaust power there
is to drive the compressor, which in turn creates more engine power! It's
a feedback loop.
With the mechanical supe there is no feedback loop - if you are at 5000
rpm you get the same compressor output regardless of your throttle setting.
Another issue is control of the supercharger. You could put in some complicated,
expensive, heavy, and power-robbing mechanical device to control speed on
a mechanical supercharger. On a turbo all you have to do is vary the orifice
sizes and/or use a wastegate. Much cheaper, lighter, etc. and costs you
no power to operate. You may still have some turbo lag, but the other benefits
normally counteract this.
Also a turbo system will be much lighter than a comparable mech. supercharger
system. It has far fewer moving parts with lower mechanical loads, so it
will also be more reliable and cheaper to produce.
The only difficult issue here is the high-temperature of the exhaust
gas, but this has been conquered even on production vehicles with nasty
duty cycles.
Look at racing. The most powerful racing cars ever built were the turbo
F-1 cars of the late 1980's. With 1.5 liters displacement (91 c.i.) they
regularly developed 1200bhp for race conditions, and there are reports of
significantly higher figures with "one-lap wonder" qualifying
engines. Mechanical superchargers were perfectly legal in F-1 but turbos
resulted in a much faster and fuel-efficient vehicle.
I guess I left drag racing out of the above paragraph. Those are 8+ litre
engines, and don't put out nearly as much power as the F-1 engines per unit
displacement. They do use mechanical superchargers, but I think this has
more to do with frozen technical rules than what provides optimal performance.
The superchargers in Top Fuel dragsters are based on old truck blowers,
and are "spec" units - no design changes allowed, you use that
supercharger or none at all. Also efficiency is not an issue in this class
- these guys just want full power for 5 seconds and that's it. BTW the fuel
pumps on those suckers are 60 gallons per minute GOD DAMN!
Ok I gotta get some work done sheeeesh.
rsns posted 03-12-99 04:49 PM
Sheesh, funked.
But I guess this is what you get when you load a squad with engineers...
The only thing I'd like to underscore from funked's thesis is that turbo
matching is all about tradeoffs. There are indeed penalties in adding a
turbo to the system (decreased exhaust flow efficiency and the added pumping
loss that miko described) but with a properly matched turbo these effects
are far surpassed by the benefits of the turbo in creating higher intake
flow density (burn more air, get more power out).
A poorly matched turbo on the other hand can result in performance that
is worse than a naturally aspirated engine. And there will always be "turbo
lag" at lower rpms before the exhaust pressure builds up enough for
the turbo to kick in.
As for radial vs inline at high alt? Could it be that it's more a matter
of the efficiency of the overall airframe (pointier noses) than just the
engine that leads to that impression?
-rsns-
925 CABS
bjh posted 03-12-99 05:04 PM
Thanks funked, that's the kind of answer and explaination I was looking
for. Make's me remember why I *almost* picked Mechanical Engineering instead
of Electrical. Then I remember how bad fluid mechanics and dynamics really
was. :-)
rsns: Understanding is that this was a relative power loading type of
issue but a true % of HP available by altitude. So the radial may be down
to 70% HP whereas the inline is still at 75% HP at a given altitude.
Now comes the next question: Which aircraft had turbo? I know the p47
and I believe the p38 had turbo's, but what others? And which aircraft had
mechanical supercharging? Which did without? It probably shows up on many
of the speed charts, but I be interested to know. Seems like most source
neglect to mention these details.
-bjh--
Squad Leader
VMF-58 Wildcards Rogue Squadron
Lugnut posted 03-12-99 06:04 PM
Most blown planes had superchargers, and as far as I know, the P-47 and
B-17 were the only planes of the war that had turbo-superchargers, the 38
just had turbos as far as I know. I read an excerpt on the P-47 evolution
to the J/M/N series that described the testing of the "new" C
series R-2800 by Republic, they tried to find out at what manifold pressure
detonation would occur. They boosted the motor to an MP that produced 3,600
hp! Not satisfied, they ran it at 3,600 hp for 250 hours, without any failure!
Kids don't try this at home with a Merlin...
Lugnut
rsns posted 03-12-99 07:35 PM
Okay, back to the inline vs radial thing. Here's my thought.
The radial engines were generally air cooled. So we would expect the
thermal loss through the cylinder walls during combustion and expansion
to be greater for a radial engine than an inline engine which cools mainly
by drawing heat away in coolant flowing through the cylinder head.
-rsns-
925 CABS
Pyro posted 03-12-99 08:01 PM
bjh wrote:
I'm curious as to why in normally aspirated engines, Radial engines
typically suffer more at altitude as compared with Inline engines? From
what I've been read this is nearly universal.
Not sure exactly what you mean here, but if those observations are based
on WB, they're incorrect. None of the planes in WB are normally aspirated,
they all have at least a single-stage supercharger.
bjh wrote:
Also, I was reading about the p47 and one of the things that was stressed
in the artical was the advantages of a Turbo-supercharger. Now versus a
normally aspirated engine, and at altitude the benefits are clear. The implied
arguement was that they were also superior to mechanical superchargers.
Unfortunately they didn't support this with any reasons. For the life of
me, I can't see any reason to think there's an advantage for the turbo,
in fact I would have expected the opposite, that a mechanically driven charger
would be able to work in a broader range. I'd be curious as to what the
difference is.
A mechanical supercharger had no means to adjust its speed, except in
the case of two-speed superchargers. Even then, they only had a low and
high gear. The speed at which the turbine spun and thus created pressure
was a direct relationship to the speed of the engine. Since it does take
a lot of power to drive the supercharger, engineers had to make sure that
the increase in power was greater than the power consumed in running it.
It also would do you no good to create pressures greater than what the engine
could safely use.
Because the supercharger turned at a constant rate, it's ability to generate
a given pressure would decrease as altitude increased. At a given altitude,
the supercharger would then kick in the second stage or switch to high speed
and performance would be boosted but continue to drop as altitude increased.
Now with the turbosupercharger, one of the stages is driven by the exhaust
pressure. A nice benefit of this is that the speed at which the turbine
spins can be manipulated by a valve controlling the exhaust outflow. This
means that a constant manifold pressure can be maintained as altitude increases.
The exhaust pressure in the turbosupercharged engine stays constant as
altitude increases. This has a good and bad effect. The good effect is that
it as the outside pressure decreases, the exhaust pressure can be made to
do more work. The bad news is that compared to a mechanically supercharged
engine, there is a lot of energy lost because of the higher pressure in
the exhaust manifold. More energy has to be spent pushing the exhaust from
the cylinder. With the mechanically driven supercharger, the pressure decreases
as altitude increases. This lower pressure outside the cylinder is like
having more pressure within the cylinder and thus more power.
One big benefit of the mechanically driven supercharger is that the exhaust
can be used to augment thrust. Trust me, this is a much bigger deal than
it sounds. It doesn't give much of a performance boost to low end acceleration
or climb, but it does have a big effect on top speed.
The turbosupercharger is also pretty complex and bulky WRT installation.
-Pyro
Starre posted 03-12-99 08:03 PM
The one difference that "I" know about with turbo's ..the exhaust
turbo has created diesel engines that are developing 500-600hp's in semi's
w/o any larger engines The same size engine used too create only 240hp w/o
turbo. Another thing that has come as a result are cleaner emissions AND
higher fuel economy.
In the trucks the rpm is critical for the turbo.
if you say start at a hill with 1500 rpm's you will not have any turbo
boost and you will be grabbing gears all the way and going 15-20 miles an
hr up a medium grade.
Now if you hit that same grade at 1850-1900 rpm's you will have 30lbs
of manifold boost. and you can top the same hill at between 45 and 55 mph
(this will sound familiar..you had better be watching the pyro for the
heat buildup. If you dont..your gonna have a BAD hair day)
many of you may have noticed trucks and truck parking avail at the top
of a hill. Its not just for hot engines, but more for HOT turbo's.
Now a geared supercharger would actually drop fuel milage and increase
emisions.
Starre
chisel posted 03-12-99 08:39 PM
-Whoo Hoo a question I know the answer too
Radial versus inline at altitude
Question should be Air versus water cooling?
At higher altitudes the air is thinner so less direct cooling for the
heads/cylinders higher chance of detonation, cant have as much Manifold
pressure.
With water cooling the heat is carried away from the critical areas atleast.
Turbo charging versus mechanical supercharging
Exhaust driven turbochargers act as altitude compensators. Forget all
the wastegate crap for the moment, real engines dont use wastgates (diesel
forever!). As you go up in altitude the atmospheric pressure is less so
the exaust can flow more freely hence (pressure differential across the
turbine)the turbo can be driven faster moving more air. (up to a certain
point.)
Starre check out a CAT or Cummins engine most of the newer ones have
a Altitude rating for HP
BTW its not RPM that increases boost its LOAD!
oh and dont forget that little computer stuck on the side. That helped
the HP ratings too
Starre ur my new arch enemy, Damn truck drivers Salute!
Im a Heavy Equipment Technician (fancy title Eh!)
Hold still while I kill you
Chisel,
JG5 'Eismeer'
worr posted 03-12-99 09:25 PM
I'm curious as to why in normally aspirated engines, Radial engines
typically suffer more at altitude as compared with Inline engines? From
what I've been read this is nearly universal.
I believe some of the confusion above is because the basic premise of
the question has not been challenged.
There were radials that did better at alt than inline engines and others
that did not! The P-47 was a radial with very big lungs. There is more here
than radial verses inline, or even water verses air cooled.
Worr, out
chisel posted 03-12-99 11:02 PM
Sure Worr complicate things
But he's correct it depends not so much on the engine itself but on what
it was designed for. What size of blower, Blower gear ratios/turbo charger
used, fuel octane used. Take for example the db605a and 605as same longblock
but larger supercharger on the 605as
db605a 1,475Hp at 2800rpm 1.42ata Takeoff/emg.
1,355HP at 2800rpm 1.42ata at 18,700ft
db605as 1,435 at 2800rpm 1.42ata Takeoff/emg.
1,200HP at 2800rpm 1.42ata 26,200ft
(i'm assuming they rated them at the altitude they could produce 1.42ata
of boost pressure)
So just by changing the blower they turned a Med altitude engine into
a hi altitude engine.
Don't quote these numbers for fact they are from Janes 45/46 edition.But
you get the idea
Still stand by my first post tho.
Oh ya imol can we get a MAP guage on the p47 atleast.When we luftwaffles
start pokin holes in all those intake pipes I want it to lose some performance
Hold still while I kill you
Chisel,
JG5 'Eismeer'
rsns posted 03-13-99 12:02 AM
chisel wrote:
Radial versus inline at altitude
Question should be Air versus water cooling?
At higher altitudes the air is thinner so less direct cooling for
the heads/cylinders higher chance of detonation, cant have as much Manifold
pressure.
With water cooling the heat is carried away from the critical areas
at least.
We must also consider that the radiator of the water cooled engine would
be affected by the less dense air at alt in the same way. Furthermore, the
lower air temperatures at alt would tend to aid cooling in both cases. So
it depends on which trend outpaces the other for which engine type.
My engines class was full of these sort of opposing trends. I loved and
hated it.
-rsns-
925 CABS
Tomb posted 03-13-99 08:46 AM
a quick conversation with an engine basher
its more simple
Air cooled engines need air to cool them
the higher you go the thinner it gets
the faster you need to fly to move the air through it, the more power
the engine needs the hotter it gets etc etc
the hotter the engine runs he less efficant the engine can be
water cooled on the other hand maintains the engine at a constant temperture
and more importantly allows the use of intercoolers
the merlin 60 series was TWO speed but also TWO staged with intercoolers
keeping the air cooler and therfore thicker
compare the frontal area of a radial with the comparatively small intake
area of the spit/109/mustang etc radiator to see how much more efficant
this method of cooling is
it took something as massive as the P47 to get anywhere near a powerfull
turbo charger in a fighter
the axis never had the metalurical finnese to get the high compression
superchargers the merlin used or the high temperatures the turbo superchargers
used...the me 262 engines suffered as a consequence and the normal piston
fighters used fuel additives or charge coolers to gain more power
the Japanese always had problems getting a turbo charger to work well
for the above reasons and getting the right metals needed to Japan
at the end of the day it was down to materials and engineeing...then
the supercharged inline ruled the day now i would suspect it would be a
turbo as meturlurgy has moved on and the jet engine has been around a while
Tomb
Tahoe posted 03-13-99 09:01 AM
Brian asked:
"Another thing is the FW190. I don't think the 14-cylinder radial
it had was turbocharged was it? I don't have enough references to know for
sure. Thus the 190 didn't do well higher up, and this lead to the 190D and
finally the Ta152. Both of these had inverted V engines, liquid-cooled.
But I don't remember off hand, were they turbo'ed?"
Answer:
The FW190D-9 used the Junkers Jumo 213A and the Ta152-H used the Jumo
213E, both with superchargers. Hence the large air scoop (and even larger
on the Ta152-H) on the starboard side of the engine nacelle. The Jumo 213E
had a two-stage supercharger.
funked posted 03-13-99 09:55 AM
Tahoe we talking mechanical superchargers (aka blower) or turbosuperchargers
(aka turbo)?
Brian posted 03-13-99 05:00 PM
Thanks for the info Tahoe! I've read through all the posts so far and
this is great! The discussion on turbos vs. blowers and the other part about
radials vs. inlines was good stuff. I'm an engineer too, though I don't
work full-time yet... just finishing up my master's. I'm glad I found agw
due to the great people here. If I asked something like this in rec.aviation.military,
there would be a good chance for a large flame war to develop after a while.
Thanks for asking the question too, bjh.
Brian
Tahoe posted 03-13-99 05:17 PM
funked, my references say "supercharger" and nothing is shown
to be hooked up to the exhaust stacks. But then, one reference says the
FW190 D-11 (ground attack machine) used the Jumo 213F engine with a three-stage
"turbo-supercharger." All my references seem to agree that Kurt
Tank preferred the Daimler Benz DB 603 engine.
Brian, NP. I've learned some from this discussion too.
chiselposted 03-13-99 06:18 PM
Ya! what tomb said. Whos the engine basher?
I believe thats why the germans went with nitrous oxide systems to boost
hi alt performance?
There was a version of the BMW801 with turbosupercharging but I dont
know if it was ever used in the FW190 even on a limited basis. ik/kats you
around?
Starre
I work mostly with older stuff/off road equipment and I prefer green
too.
The 2cycle kind, there still in production since 1938! Nothin like the
sound of a Screamin Jimmy!
Hold still while I kill you
Chisel,
JG5 'Eismeer'
Tomb posted 03-14-99 02:09 PM
found something interesting
mitsubishi MK4R-c engine
turbo charged rated at 1820hp
gave the test aircraft a speed of 362 mph at 30000ft
misubishi MK4U-4 engine
three stage supercharger rated at 1820hp also
gave the test aircraft a speed of 382mph ( 20 mph faster) at 22310ft
(7700ft lower)
the test engine is a radial (MK4)
the turbo was also unrelable and dropped
the supercharged version went into production
interesting the same engine with the same HP rating give totaly different
results between turbo and supercharger versions
who was the engine basher...well some day i will tell the WB guys about
this guy
he is very old now but has taken apart many engines such as the fw190/me109
series not to mention many usa and japenese types
as he puts it he was "something at rolls royce" i took a look
he certainly was
most people know who designed what plane..how many know who designed
what engine(s)....
Tomb
bjh posted 03-15-99 01:38 PM
Not sure exactly what you mean here, but if those observations are
based on WB, they're incorrect. None of the planes in WB are normally aspirated,
they all have at least a single-stage supercharger.
Pyro -- Not from observations in Warbirds. More from general reading.
One big benefit of the mechanically driven supercharger is that the
exhaust can be used to augment thrust. Trust me, this is a much bigger deal
than it sounds. It doesn't give much of a performance boost to low end acceleration
or climb, but it does have a big effect on top speed.
Pyro, this had to be something designed into an airframe / engine combo
right? What planes took advantage of this characteristic? Here's the kicker,
could this outweigh the other efficiencies described above, of using a turbo
instead? Ie despite less HP overall, more speed?
Gentlemen, thank you for all the clear, well explained, well thought
out answers. Nice to round out all that knowledge I thought I had.
You know, I just realized that we just went an entire 25+ post without
serious flaming or whining. I hope argo doesn't kick me out for starting
it. <grin, duck and run>
-bjh--
Squad Leader
VMF-58 Wildcards Rogue Squadron
Pyro posted 03-15-99 03:22 PM
Pyro -- Not from observations in Warbirds. More from general reading.
I see a lot of explanations regarding why this happens, but I think the
real question should be whether it is really the case. I can find no evidence
to suggest that inlines are better at producing more power at altitude than
radials. I think this is completely tied to their methods of supercharging.
You can see this just by looking at different power curves of inline and
radial engines and comparing their superchargers.
Pyro, this had to be something designed into an airframe / engine
combo right? What planes took advantage of this characteristic? Here's the
kicker, could this outweigh the other efficiencies described above, of using
a turbo instead? Ie despite less HP overall, more speed?
The design of the exhaust stacks has a big impact on jet thrust from
exhaust. With the A6M5, they achieved a sizeable increase in speed by redesigning
the exhaust stacks despite using the same engine and having a higher weight.
The exhaust system was often tinkered with in model to model changes of
a design as this was a "free" way to squeeze out better performance.
Here's an example to give you an idea about how much difference exhaust
thrust can make. At 300 MPH and with an assumed propeller efficiency of
.8, every pound of exhaust thrust is equal to 1 BHP. That means that if
you can get 100 pounds of exhaust thrust at 300mph, it is the same as your
engine generating an extra 100 HP. At higher speeds, the equivilent HP bonus
is even higher. The 190 could produce up to 300lbs of exhaust thrust to
give you an idea of how significant it could be to top speed. Your total
increase in thrust from exhaust will be equal to the cosine of the angle
between the airplane's thrust angle and the angle of the exhaust force.
-Pyro
chisel posted 03-16-99 12:47 AM
Question Pyro
I understand a little about exhaust augmentors and get the basics of
how it works but why would an increase in airspeed increase the thrust from
the exhaust? The exhaust would still exit at the same speed for a given
load OR the airflow would help extract it.Just cant see it. Teach me oh
flammable one or atleast point me to some books on this subject.
Hold still while I kill you
Chisel,
JG5 'Eismeer'
Pyro posted 03-16-99 01:37 AM
I understand a little about exhaust augmentors and get the basics
of how it works but why would an increase in airspeed increase the thrust
from the exhaust?
An increase in airspeed does not increase the exhaust thrust. It increases
the equivilent horsepower of that exhaust thrust. The reason for that is
that the thrust created per engine HP decreases as speed increases. Jet
thrust does not work that way, it stays pretty much constant. That's why
a P-51 will easily out-accelerate a 262 at low speeds, yet the 262 will
go a helluva lot faster on the top end. The P-51 can generate a lot more
thrust at low speeds than the 262, but the jet can produce a lot more thrust
than the P-51 at high speeds.
-Pyro
Tomb posted 03-16-99 04:11 AM
i think its more to do with "mass air flow"
a propellor moves a lot of air slowley
so lots of acceleration but less speed
a jet moves a smaller mount of air much faster so less aceeleration but
more speed
the ultimate in piston technolgy was the turbo compound engine in which
the exaust was expelled into a jet like turbine rear end
the next step up was the turbo prop which was a full jet engine turning
a prop
in all cases the prop limits the speed attainable
the most remakable plane is the russian bear bomber with its massive
slow turning turbo props...
Tomb
Bino posted 03-16-99 01:12 PM
Tomb: ...the ultimate in piston technolgy was the turbo
compound engine...
My impression was that a Turbo-Compound recip engine has both an exhaust-driven
intake charge compressor (Turbo-charger) and a second exhaust-driven turbine
that is geared to help spin the crankshaft. Here's the page about the P&W
R-4360 over at the USAF Museum:
www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/engines/eng34a.htm
bino-- <II./JG54> bino.warbirds.org
chisel posted 03-17-99 01:04 AM
Ok you've made me dig deeper into my A/C powerplants manual.Heres the
section on converting thrust into HP.
"Because power is determined by using force and distance,it is not
possible to make a direct comparison of thrust and HP in a jet engine. When
the engine is driving an airplane through the air,however,we can compute
the equivalent horsepower being developed. When we convert the ft/lbs per
minute of 1HP to miles-pounds per hour we obtain the figure of 375. That
is 1hp is equal to 33,000ft/lb/min or 375mi/lb/hr thrust horsepower(thp)
is then obtained by using the following formula:
thp=(thrust{lbs}*airspeed {mph})/375
now using this formula with an 80% efficient prop does drop it down to
300mi/lb/hr at the prop.
now to me this has nothing to do with brake HP as it does not take into
account the weight or drag of a certain airframe it compares more to indicated
HP but not really either. And using this formula to judge the exhaust HP
of a recip engine cant really apply either since the exhaust thrust isnt
pushing the plane to that speed by itself.What would the speed gain be with
and without exhaust thrust?
Now on the subject of turbojets the reason for the slow acceleration
does have to do with 'mass air flow' The faster the airspeed the more effect
Ram air pressure has on a turbojet, tries to jam more air into the front,
and the more you can jam in the front the more you can fire out the back.
Turbojets are very inefficient at low airspeeds.Plus the fact that turbojets
spooled up relatively slowly in those days.
The turbocompound was the ultimate in recip technology.They used what
was/is called a blowdown turbine or power recovery turbine that worked on
the velocity of the exhaust rather than the pressure(to keep backpressure
to a minimum) The turbine was connected to the crankshaft through a gear
reduction and a fluid clutch. Turbocompounds were used on the DC-7 and the
Lockheed Super Constellation (sp?)
On the Wright model TC19DA turbocompound the HP was rated at 3,250HP.
Normal R3350 engines were rated at 2700HP.
*not official HP ratings, take with a grain of salt. C.Y.A man
If I learned nothing else in Tech school those 3 letters have served
me well!
Its amazing how war brings out the best and worst.Human technology ,overall,
advanced more rapidly in those 6/7 years than it has before or since!
So bjh have we wandered off topic yet?
Great thread BTW
Hold still while I kill you
Chisel,
JG5 'Eismeer'
Tomb posted 03-17-99 08:01 AM
sorry dude it has everything to do with airflow mass ..a jet chokes if
it gets too much and will "dump" it over the side at high speed
or suck it in at low speed
thrust is usually stated as "static" thrust
ie its measured from a stationary engine
any way back to ejector exausts my engine friend states that only at
high altitude did much difference show because it was preasure differential
is what counts and the higher you go the greater the preasure difference
between engine exaust and the external preasure...turbos also benifit up
to the max allowed boost limit and then must be backed off with altitude
on radail v inline he states that to go fast especially at altitude you
need a pointy bit of plane at the front also for the same HP more thrust
can be gained from an inline and coolers so that the cooling mechanism adds
thrust while a aircooled radial must pass air over the less than streamlined
radial engine and this is draggy..the fw190 minimised the effect at much
as possible for radials
the biggest problem for radials was to lose heat ..air is not as good
a medium as water/gylcol....the Fw190d gained a supercharged inline to gain
altitude performance because it could not be obtained from the radial fw190A
got a performance test done by the US marines somewhere for the P51b
v f4u-1 i think..the f4u had more horsepower to to be nearly even on performance
it must be rememberd that its more complicated than just bolting xyz
engine on it had to be a engine/airframe combination
Tomb
chisel posted 03-18-99 12:01 AM
sorry dude it has everything to do with airflow mass ..a jet chokes
if it gets too much and will "dump" it over the side at high speed
or suck it in at low speed
Were u refering to me?
I did state that it DOES have to do with mass airflow.
Ram air effect: as the airspeed increases the air entering the inlet
gets its velocity turned into pressure as it piles up ahead of the comressor
increasing the density. Now the more dense the air is the more mass it has,and
the more mass it has the more thrust you can get from the turbojet engine.
Another way to look at it is since the air is precompressed from the
"Ram air effect" the less work the engine has to do to compress
the air to the same level, letting more energy to be converted to thrust.
The turbojets volumetric efficency is very low compared to a recip engine
(you just cant compress air as well with a fan compared to a sealed container)
At low speeds Alot! of the turbines energy is used just to drive the compessor.
The Ram air effect helps out more and more the faster you go {dont know
diddely bout supersonic flight and lets not even go there }
Now we started this by comparing the Me262 to the P-51 the Jumo engines
just could not create enough thrust at low airspeeds to accelerate like
a merlin.
Ok found some numbers to back me up {once again take with a grain of
salt.}
** Ok nevermind it doesnt back me up Dont know RPM Or throttle setting
but is still pretty cool info.
from Janes 45/46 edition
Junkers Jumo 004b
Height (ft)Speed(mph)Thrust(lbs)Fuel(lb/hr)
0........273.......1605.......2920
0........560.......1890.......3680
8200.....273.......1300.......2290
8200.....560.......1600.......2920
36k......536.......572........1080
36k......560.......715........1275
fuel consumption is just crazy on the deck!
Anyway, trust me it works even with the drop in thrust due to airspeed
the ram air effect more than makes up for it i've seen the math!
Tomb
We are in agreement, I believe, as to why recips are better accelerators
than turbine engines (turbojets anyway) just looking at it in a different
way.
Now about converting thrust into HP: Horsepower is a measure of force
and distance.
Thrust is a measure of force only.
I dont believe there is a mathematical way to convert static thrust into
horsepower, since we dont have a distance measurement.Thats why the formula
is used to give an approximation of HP {we humans like to compare }
any way back to ejector exausts my engine friend states that only
at high altitude did much difference show because it was preasure differential
is what counts and the higher you go the greater the preasure difference
between engine exaust and the external preasure...turbos also benifit up
to the max allowed boost limit and then must be backed off with altitude.
Totally agree here! I believe thats what I said in my very first post
about turbochargers. Higher pressure differential means higher velocity
of expanding gasses=more thrust.
Wont even get into air verses watercooling I know Water is more efficient.
Christ even my CPU is watercooled now. But if I say it outloud my stable
of aircooled VDubs might disown me
Hold still while I kill you
Chisel,
JG5 'Eismeer'
nrts
Member posted 03-18-99 01:04 AM
Heh just love this thread. Sat here rereading long enough for my modem
to disconnect a couple times
Btw, Chisel your VDubs aren't aircooled, they're oil cooled. One of my
own german "aircooled" engines holds 13 quarts of oil in an external
reservoir and pumps it through the engine and 2 oil coolers with 3 separate
oil pumps. Hardly air cooled eh?
-nrts-
Pyro posted 03-18-99 01:49 AM
Thrust is thrust, regardless of whether it's produced by a prop or jet
and whether you measure it in pounds or newtons. Acceleration is simply
derived from Newton's second law, F=ma. Acceleration is the quotient of
force/mass.
Thrust is a force, HP is power which is a measure of the rate at which
work is done. Power = force x speed. If your force stays constant and your
speed increases, your power has increased. Rearranging the equation you
get force = power/speed which shows that force decreases for a given power
as speed increases. This is the advantage of the jet engine. It produces
thrust whereas the reciprocating engine needs to convert its mechanical
power to thrust.
The prop plane will create 1/4 the thrust at 400mph that it does at 100mph(disregarding
varying prop efficiency). This is why you see the different performance
characteristics between props and jets. This is why exhaust thrust becomes
more of a performance factor the faster the plane is traveling.
-Pyro
chisel
Member posted 03-18-99 02:55 AM
Ok Ok nrts ya got me Air/oilcooled
But thats just a given You got a Porcshe 911?
Ok Pyro I do understand where your coming from now! I wasnt thinking
about prop efficiency losses at high speed. Didnt go thru the propeller
section yet LOL.
Now that I got that thru my thick skull that 300lbs of thrust translates
into how many MPH increase ?
Oh and I did a few calculations on the Jumo figures above at 0ft there
is a gain of 51% in airspeed for a 6.7% increase in fuellbs/hr/lb of thrust
generated.geez hope I figured that out correctly.
Man I need a life!
Tomb posted 03-18-99 04:39 AM
enjoying this discussion i think we are all arriving at the similar conclusions
at the same and for pyro heres a thought.
what you say about jet/prop is generaly true
but as speed increases you need to increase the blade angle which you
can do with a prop
the jet cant do this from this era and even today it takes carefull intake
design to keep the intake speed under control
so while i agree with you on principle i disagree on detail
the basic fact is niether prop or jet fan likes supersonic air (which
does not like to be compressed)...this is the limit which a prop hits first..as
soon as the blade tips go supersonic efficancy is dramatically reduced..the
russians got round this by slowing the prop speed down and those huge contra
rotating props on the bear bomber allowed it to cruise at 480mph and level
speed of 550mph...that performance can embarass a lot of jets
while your formulae is in the right direction it aint that easy
Gotta go for now
Tomb
miko 2dashes posted 03-18-99 12:37 PM
Miko,
I disagree. A Turbo is more efficient precisely because it harnesses
the energy of the exhaust gasses, which continue to expand as and after
they exit the cylinder.
Y'see, the piston does not have to push on those hot exhaust gasses
very much at all to coax them out of the cylinder. Hot as they are, they
expand out of the cylinder very quickly once the valve is opened.
Have to disagree with Bino. According to the laws of physics, the exhaust
causes exactly the same pressure on the piston as on the turbine. Hot gases
are not intelligent enough, so they try to expand in all directions, rather
then just in the direction away from the piston .
I agree that when piston reaches the top and the valve closes, then the
gasses remaining in the exhaust system can push the turbine without affecting
that particular piston.
Turbo is convenient because it automatically increases the turbine speed
with increase in engine power in wide range of conditions (seed, load, gear,
air pressure). For an engine running at constant load (electric power generator)
a mechanical system would be more efficient.
miko--
Pyro posted 03-18-99 01:07 PM
Prop efficiency is what you use to convert to thrust horsepower. To convert
thp to thrust, you use the formula THP*375/TAS.
This is all about the difference between producing direct thrust and
having to convert mechanical power to thrust. You can talk about variations
in jet performance and prop efficiency, transonic effects, and turboprops,
but none of those are really germane to the fundamental and overwhelming
difference between the two.
Anybody wanna talk about sand-filled ping pong balls again?
-Pyro
Bino posted 03-18-99 01:21 PM
MOL should set us up with a testing lab. Y'know, engines, turbo- and
super-chargers, dynamometers, wind tunnels, test-bed planes, ping-pong balls,
the works. Yeah! That's the ticket!
bino-- <II./JG54> bino.warbirds.org
Pyro posted 03-18-99 01:58 PM
Bino,
Actually you could do that in a spreadsheet. You'll probably learn more
setting up the spreadsheet than you will by inputing numbers into it.
-Pyro
rsns posted 03-18-99 05:47 PM
miko,
The efficiency of a turbocharger over a mechanical supercharger was best
explained in funked's earlier post, in my opinion. Way back when this thread
was only about a dozen messages long!
The basic point is that it is true that the exhaust backpressure will
increase the pumping loss on the engine, as you rationally assert. However
the mechanical friction of a supercharger also represents a loss on the
engine, and an arguably greater one. Furthermore the turbocharger recovers
some energy from the exhaust gases to run the turbine while the mechanically
supercharged engine discards all of the exhaust energy.
-rsns-
925 CABS |