obanion
Automotive
- Jan 1, 2004
- 101
First idea came here:
Then, last night something occured to me. I was reading about pulsejets and it gave me a idea. In a pulsejet, the one way vanes in the front close during combustion, the exhaust gasses escape with high velocity ouit the back, and once pressure has dropped, because air is elastic, it creates a vacuum, pulling open the vanes, and letting fresh air in. The kinetic energy of the hot gasses going out the back is what pulls the air in.
Now, what if we added a exhaust port to the cylinders down near the bottom of the cylinder, then REMOVED the cams entirely, replacing the valve springs with very light springs, with say a 2-5psi opening pressure. Intake with be through all available valves (4 on the motor I hope to use). Also, a forced induction of some sort will be required. I'm thinking the best is a fixed displacement blower, with a belt ratio to give no boost, but just perfectly fill the cylinders without blowing anything extra out the exhaust ports.
Now, imagine this thing in operation. Start with a combustion event. Piston moves down, valves stay closed from the pressure in the cylinder forcing them shut. Piston continues down until it uncovers the exhaust port. At that instant, the pressure and exhaust in the cylinder blows out the port. As the cylinder finishes exhausting, it will suck the valves open at the top, both from a pulsejet like effect of the exhaust creating a vacuum, and the push of the blower. The valves should fly open, and dump a full load of fresh air into the cylinder very quickly because of LOTS of flow area, and top to bottom filling with a blower behind it. Now the cylinder is full. The piston by now is coming back up and covers the exhaust port. Air will now try to reverse out the intake, but can't, as the valves will immediately shut (they are like check valves). The air/fuel is trapped, and gets compressed, then ignited, now repeat the process.
I see several advanatges here over the same motor as a 4-stroke:
2-3x the mass airflow capability. 2x alone from 2x as many induction events, I'd also expect higher VE (from the huge flow area and top to bottom filling)
Slighty improved efficiency. No friction from the cams, no pumping losses from compressing heavy springs. Anyone know the aproximate % of losses from a 4-stroke that go to the valvetrain? Also, per combustion event, there is only half as much frictional losses (2 strokes instead of 4).
Multiply the mass airflow improvement times the efficiency improvement, and we could be talking 2.5-3.5x the horsepower from the same motor.
Why wouldn't it work? Shoot some holes in this, something I'm missing.
Then, last night something occured to me. I was reading about pulsejets and it gave me a idea. In a pulsejet, the one way vanes in the front close during combustion, the exhaust gasses escape with high velocity ouit the back, and once pressure has dropped, because air is elastic, it creates a vacuum, pulling open the vanes, and letting fresh air in. The kinetic energy of the hot gasses going out the back is what pulls the air in.
Now, what if we added a exhaust port to the cylinders down near the bottom of the cylinder, then REMOVED the cams entirely, replacing the valve springs with very light springs, with say a 2-5psi opening pressure. Intake with be through all available valves (4 on the motor I hope to use). Also, a forced induction of some sort will be required. I'm thinking the best is a fixed displacement blower, with a belt ratio to give no boost, but just perfectly fill the cylinders without blowing anything extra out the exhaust ports.
Now, imagine this thing in operation. Start with a combustion event. Piston moves down, valves stay closed from the pressure in the cylinder forcing them shut. Piston continues down until it uncovers the exhaust port. At that instant, the pressure and exhaust in the cylinder blows out the port. As the cylinder finishes exhausting, it will suck the valves open at the top, both from a pulsejet like effect of the exhaust creating a vacuum, and the push of the blower. The valves should fly open, and dump a full load of fresh air into the cylinder very quickly because of LOTS of flow area, and top to bottom filling with a blower behind it. Now the cylinder is full. The piston by now is coming back up and covers the exhaust port. Air will now try to reverse out the intake, but can't, as the valves will immediately shut (they are like check valves). The air/fuel is trapped, and gets compressed, then ignited, now repeat the process.
I see several advanatges here over the same motor as a 4-stroke:
2-3x the mass airflow capability. 2x alone from 2x as many induction events, I'd also expect higher VE (from the huge flow area and top to bottom filling)
Slighty improved efficiency. No friction from the cams, no pumping losses from compressing heavy springs. Anyone know the aproximate % of losses from a 4-stroke that go to the valvetrain? Also, per combustion event, there is only half as much frictional losses (2 strokes instead of 4).
Multiply the mass airflow improvement times the efficiency improvement, and we could be talking 2.5-3.5x the horsepower from the same motor.
Why wouldn't it work? Shoot some holes in this, something I'm missing.