NeilRoshier
Automotive
- Mar 3, 2003
- 82
I have been reading and asking questions of people again and so far the question has remained un answered (possibly poor questions!?), hence this post. The current range of flow benches are quite advanced (and expensive) but are you able to accurately predict the effect on the wet flow (ie the flow of the intake charge) of something like flow shear at the short turn radius? given that the flow benches I have seen are all dry flow only.
I was wondering if the wet flow would react differently given the added mass of the fuel in suspension. It would seem logical that the fuel in suspension may not follow the same path as the air given the difference in mass and would this difference be more prevalent given larger droplet size in suspension?
My thinking then made me wonder if the valve shrouding that occurs due to the flow shear would then have a detrimental effect on the fuel distribution in the cylinder and then on the burn-resulting power.
I was wondering if the wet flow would react differently given the added mass of the fuel in suspension. It would seem logical that the fuel in suspension may not follow the same path as the air given the difference in mass and would this difference be more prevalent given larger droplet size in suspension?
My thinking then made me wonder if the valve shrouding that occurs due to the flow shear would then have a detrimental effect on the fuel distribution in the cylinder and then on the burn-resulting power.