Dynamo Meter Fact Sheet
Dynamo Meter Fact Sheet
Dynamo Meter Fact Sheet
Horizon Gitano-Briggs
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P=0.3 D=1.0 P=0.3 D=0.0
P=0.3 D=0.3
OUTLINE
Part 1 Basics What is a Dynamometer? - The Basics Dynamometer Designs Mechanical Details Part 2 Measurements Measurements: Cycle Averaged vs. Crank Angle Resolved Instrumentation Issues Testing: Steady State vs. Transient Controllers Dynamometer Dynamics Part 3 Drive Cycles Analysis Drive Cycles Test point Determination and Weighting Part 4 Dynamometry Case Studies USA Philippians Malaysia
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OBJECTIVES
This course was designed for engineers working on engines testing The hope is that after attending this course you will be better able to: Understand the strengths and weaknesses of the various dynamometer designs Interpret data from dynamometer testing, and how it applies to a vehicle Design more effective dynamometer tests Trouble shoot dynamometer problems more effectively Design and build dynamometer and Engine Test solutions
Dynamometer Components
Bearings Additional Sensors Coupler Engine Shaft Data Acquisition System Torque Sensor Speed Sensor Dyno
Controller
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Dynamometer Basics
Engine Torque Vs. Dyno Torque The system operates where Engine Torque equals torque absorbed by the Dynamometer By varying the engine throttle and load we can test any point under the engines max torque curve
A Dynamometer is load device used to measure an engines torque and speed. We often measure Fuel Consumption, Emissions and other parameters as well. A dynamometer can also be used to control the speed of the engine by varying the load placed on the engine. Dynos are often used to test different engine designs at the same load settings (Torque and Speed) for comparison purposes. We want to test the engine under conditions similar to the actual conditions (speed, torque) in the field, or even simulate an actual drive cycle with the dynamometer
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Dynamometers
There are 2 basic kinds of dynamometers: Absorption Dynamometers
These are devices that absorb the mechanical power from the test engine.
Transmission Dynamometers
These are basically torque measurement devices placed in a power transmission link (ie. a shaft). They can be used to measure torque and speed, and thus power.
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Dynamometers
All Absorption Dynamometers share some basic features:
The shaft is connected to a Rotor housed in a Stator. There is some form of coupling (mechanical, hydraulic, aerodynamic, electromagnetic) between the Rotor and Stator. Equal and opposite torques are induced on the Rotor and Stator:
Coupling Medium Stator Rotor Rotation Force on Rotor Force Measurement Device (Load Cell)
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Force on Stator
Shaft
Frictional (Break) Hydraulic Generator Eddy current Fan Vehicular Motored Dynos
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Break
Force on Break
Disk
Force on Disk
Rotation Break
Rotation
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Hydraulic Dyno
The shaft drives the impeller of a pump. The working fluid is pumped through a hydraulic circuit including a throttle valve. Hydraulic drag resists motion of the impeller. The throttle valve must be adjusted to vary the mechanical load. Hydraulic dynamometers typically have the highest power densities.
Pump
Shaft
Inlet Reservoir
Valve
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Rotation
Water Tank
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Eddy Current
Rotation
Rotation
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Fan Dynamometer
The shaft spins a fan which moves air. The fan must be calibrated on a frictional dynamometer before use, and its load is a function of temperature, barometric pressure and humidity. Torque goes as the square of the shaft speed. These dynos are typically not adjustable, but are very inexpensive.
1000 900 800 700 Fan Power (W) 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 500 1000 1500 2000 Engine Speed (rpm) 2500 3000 Power = 1E-07 RPM
2.83
2.5
1.83
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0 3500
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Fan Dynamometer
Fans have 2 orientations: High load (normal) and low load (reversed). In the Normal orientation it efficiently pumps air, dissipating more energy. In Reversed orientation the blades move less air because they are less efficient. So there are 2 possible load curves:
Air Flow
Normal Rotation
Air
Reversed Rotation
During calibration the air flow should be blocked similar to what it will be during use Dummy cowling Test Frictional Air Flow Air Flow Dyno Engine
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Fan Dynamometer
Torque Curve from same fan in Normal and Reversed orientations
2.50
2.00
1.50
Normal Rotation
1.00
0.50
Reversed Rotation
0.00 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 Fan Speed (rpm )
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Vehicle Dynamometer
A vehicle may be weighed and instrumented to measure speed and acceleration. Knowing the acceleration and velocity of the vehicle and the gear ratio we can calculate the torque and speed of the engine. This technique requires a large area for testing and is usually only used for coarse measurements of maximum engine power/torque. This is a good way to confirm engine level testing.
T1 , V 1
T2 , V 2
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Vehicle Dynamometer
This Torque Sprocket is a type of transmission Dynamometer. As torque is transmitted through it the inner and outer races (which are separate) rotate relative to one another. This shift can be sensed by a speed pickup placed near by as the sprocket rotates. This allows simultaneous recording of both speed and torque on a moving vehicle. It is therefore a type of vehicle dynamometer.
1 2 3
No Load
Loaded
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Motored Dynamometers
A dynamometer which also has the ability to drive the test engine is called a Motored dynamometer. This is useful for measuring the friction of an engine. Generally the dynamometer spins the engine (which is not firing) and the torque on the motor is measured. The motor may be integrated with the load device, such as a motor/generator combination which can operate in either absorbing (ie. like a normal dyno) or driving mode (ie. a frictional dyno).
Separate frictional dynamometers exist which are solely for the purpose of measuring the frictional load of test engines. These are usually similar to the generator type dynamometers but with a large electric motor instead of a generator.
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Motored Dynamometers
This is a 3-Phase electrical motor suspended on bearings, and connected to a load cell. It is used to measure the friction of various engines and components as a function of velocity as well as operating conditions of the components.
Load Cell
Output Shaft
Motor
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Hydraulic
Highest power in smallest package (pump).
Generator*
Inexpensive and easy to control. Fairly large for a given power.
Eddy current*
Easiest to control. Low Inertia and bearing losses.
Fan*
Very inexpensive. Needs careful calibration. Less accurate.
Vehicular*
Requires measurement of vehicle mass. Ignores air drag. Good for vehicular studies.
* Indicates that we use this type of Dynamometer in our lab here at USM
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Mechanical Details
Engine Dynamometer Couples directly to the engine No gearbox or transmission Engine speed = Dyno speed
Dyno
Engine
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Mechanical Details
A Dynamometer may also be coupled to the output of a transmission or gear box. Speed and Torque of the engine and dyno are different by the gear ratio (Speed , Torque ).
Engine
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Mechanical Details
A Chassis Dyno is driven from the vehicles wheels. The vehicle is mounted so the drive wheels are on a large roller, and locked down so it can not move. The dyno is connected to the roller, either directly or through a transmission of its own.
Driven Wheel
Roller
Dyno
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Mechanical Details
Chassis dynos are used for testing of in-use vehicles with out requiring disassembly or modification of the vehicle.
Foto: Wikipedia
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Foto: Torvec.com
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Mechanical Details
Bearings
The body of the dynamometer must be free to rotate, so it is supported on bearings.
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Mechanical Details
Load Cell Mounting
The rotation of the dynamometer housing is resisted by a load cell which measures the force. The Load cell should be loaded in only one direction (ie. axially) to avoid biasing the output. Generally the load cell is mounted so the force is perpendicular to the axis of the shaft.
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Equations
Torque = F x R Power = T x w w = RPM * 2 pi /60 Transmission: T2 = T1 x Ratio w2 = w1 / Ratio Spur gear losses (per stage) ~2% Tire losses ~ 10% Chassis or Vehicular Dyno typically reads 15-25% less than engine dyno due to transmission losses.
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Operator Lights
Display
Fuel Meter
Load Cell Coil Power
Technician
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Part 2: Testing
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Testing
Commonly Measured Parameters
Torque Speed Fuel Consumption Emissions Temperatures (Head, Exhaust, coolant)
These parameters can be measured manually or automatically. We will be focusing exclusively on automatic (computer assisted) measurements.
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Electronic Averaging
Electronic averaging (low pass filter):
Input Signal
Filtered Output
C
Vaverage
The time constant is 1/RC. For a 6000 rpm signal (100 Hz) we would want to low pass at <10 Hz, so 10 < RC x 2, or RC ~ 1: R = 10,000 ohm, C = 100 f
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Speed Measurement
Typically comes from an inductive (variable reluctance) sensor reading a number (n) of teeth of a rotating gear (directly connected to the dynos shaft) as they pass. Sinusoidal output is measured for period. Period is then inverted for frequency, and converted to rpm. 60-tooth gears are common as the frequency (in Hz) is equal to the rpm: Speed Pickup Signal
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+ 5V VTPS
Potentiometer
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Torque Measurement
Torque is almost always measured with a strain gage instrumented load cell or force transducer. This is a mechanical member which undergoes significant strain with an applied force. Semiconductor or wire foil strain gages on the surface are stretched or compressed, changing their resistance. Often several gages are oriented in a whetstone bridge giving greater sensitivity and reduced susceptibility to temperature variation effects. Excitation voltage of bridge is usually 5V to 10V. Load cells almost always require a specific amplifier which can be adjusted to zero the load, and adjust the span (calibration factor).
+ 10V RE V RC RE 2 gages are placed in RC
Emissions Measurements
The most common tool is a 5-gas analyzer measuring CO, HC, CO2 with a nondispersive Inferred sensor. There is a separate sensor for O2 and NOx. These units are fairly inexpensive (<30k RM) and reasonably accurate. For other Diesel applications separate SOx sensors are available, as well as smoke analyzers. The common Smoke analyzers are based on exhaust gas opacity. For further identification of exhaust components FTIR (Fourier Transform Inferred Spectroscopy) is common. Gas Chromatography (GC) is another useful device useful for identifying various exhaust components. Most measurements are taken directly from the exhaust tract. Water is usually condensed out, yielding dry exhaust gas numbers (ie. Excluding water from the exhaust gasses). Occasionally exhaust gas samples are bagged for off line analysis.
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Fuel Consumption
Fuel consumption is usually measured gravimetrically. The engine is operated at a constant speed and load for 1 to 10 minutes. Fuel weight is measured once (Wt1), and re-measured again (Wt2) after a time t. Fuel consumption is then calculated by: FC = (Wt1 Wt2) / t
Typical units are grams per second or grams per minute. This value is an average fuel consumption for the duration t. Inexpensive and accurate digital scales can often be interfaced to computerized data acquisition systems via a serial port connection, allowing automated measurements to be made easily. It may alternatively be measured volumetrically.
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Fuel Consumption
For comparison purposes it is common to calculate the Break Specific Fuel Consumption (BSFC). This is the Fuel consumption divided by the power output during the FC measurement: BSFC = FC / Break Power Typical Units are gm/kWh (grams of fuel per kilo-Watt hour) BSFC obviously depends on your operating speed and torque. BSFC is used to compare the relative efficiencies of different engines or engine designs. Lower BSFC means better Efficiency. Typical best automotive BSFC ~ 300 gm/kWh Good Diesel DI BSFC ~ 200 gm/kWh Carbureted Two-stroke BSFC ~ 400 gm/kWh
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Temperature Measurements
Thermocouples are fairly linear, compact and have a wide temperature range, so they typically are the sensor of choice for temperature measurements in engines. Unfortunately their output is very small (mV) so they require a special amplifier. Some data acquisition units have special front ends and can read Thermocouples directly.
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Pressure Sensors
Cylinder Pressure Requires a special Piezo-Electric transducer and amplifier. These expensive units must be precision-mounted to combustion chamber. Various designs are available including very small (~4mm) sensors and some with integrated water cooling.
Pressure Sensors
For intake and exhaust pressure low-cost MEMS devices are widely available which can measure fractions of a bar to tens of bar. Both differential and absolute pressure sensors are common. These are inexpensive and easy to wire up and use.
Pressure Data
Combustion Analysis can highlight problems with ignition stability, timing, air/fuel mixing Addition of exhaust and intake pressure sensors can give details of the gas exchange process including backwash and back pressure. Notice the irregularity of the peak pressure. This indicates an ignition stability problem caused, in this case, by retarded timing.
900 800 700 Pressure (kPa) 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 0.05 0.1 Time (sec) 0.15 0.2 0.25
Intake
Exhaust
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Pressure Data
Here we can see how the combustion chamber and exhaust pressure ring after blow down (Exhaust Valve Open). There is a spike in the intake pressure during valve overlap when Exhaust pressure washes back into intake. Valve Overlap
200 180 Pressure (kPa) 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 0.05 0.1 Time (sec) 0.15
Intake open
0.2 0.25
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This 4-point test is weighted to assume the vehicle is used mostly for cruising and low-power driving (85% of the time), idling 10% of the time, and accelerating hard only 5% of the time.
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The motors torque varies as a function of engine speed and throttle. Spark ignited engines usually have a peak torque at a medium-high speed, while Diesel engines have a relatively flat curve. Electric motors can have ascending, descending or flat torque curves.
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Dynamometer Controllers
The Controller controls the load (Dyno throttle). The set point can be electronically generated, or manually. They are usually set up to operate in 1 of 3 modes:
20 kW Dyno Controller
Open Loop
This allows manual setting of load. It will vary as speed of the system varies.
Speed Control
The controller adjusts the load to maintain a constant speed.
Torque Control
The controller adjusts the load to maintain a constant torque.
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Dynamometer Controllers
Speed Control Mode
The Controller continuously measures the Speed and adjusts load to maintain speed at desired set point. It is generally a full PID controller and must be tuned for the appropriate engine-dyno combination. It can either be a stand-alone controller or integrated with the data acquisitions system.
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Dynamometer Controllers
Torque Control Mode
Same as the Speed mode, but now controller maintains constant Torque. The Controller continuously measures the Torque and adjusts load to maintain Torque at desired set point.
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Dynamometer Controllers
Various techniques are used in controllers depending on the system under test. Simple set-point control wont generally work due to inertia in the system as it leads to overshoot and instability. Proportional Pulse Width Modulation of control signal is common with Generator and Eddy Current type dynos. Their Torque response is almost instantaneous, but again, inertial loads will cause dynamic problems. The most common control schemes involve PID (Proportional, Integral, Differential) controllers. They must be tuned for appropriate response from the full system. Hydraulics dynos respond slower as they have a mechanical valve that must opened or closed. Also as their torque curve is very non-linear, they are more difficult to control. PID controllers are still common, but some times Fuzzy Logic must be used. Often Mathematical models of the system are useful in developing control systems.
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Half Load
High Load
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Transient Testing
Sometimes we want to measure various parameters during throttle transient, or engine acceleration-deceleration. This is important for investigation of: Air/fuel ratio changes due to fuel hang up Accelerator pump action / Transient enrichment Knock This is referred to as Transient Testing as the dyno is no longer being held to a single operating point. For Transient Testing we need fractional cycle resolution in our data, so data acquisition must occur at 10kHz+.
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Transient Testing
How can we perform transient testing on a dyno? Two methods are common: Inertia only We add a large rotating mass to the dyno to simulate the effective inertia of the vehicle. This is easy to fabricate, as you just add inertia to dyno shaft, but less realistic. Inertia + Load Inertia may be added to improve system stability, but we also use a Computer controlling the dyno to simulate actual road load (Inertia, Rolling resistance, air drag) based on a model of load versus speed for the vehicle.
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P=0.3 D=0.0
P=0.3 D=0.3
P=0.3 D=1.0
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The controller needs differential control to avoid Overshoot but too much differential gain gives a long settling time. This hydraulic dynamometer has a large inertia and responds very slowly.
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Dynamometer Controller
One final control method is road load simulation control. This requires a computer which has a model of the vehicle (weight, rolling resistance, aerodynamic resistance). As the vehicle speed is increased, the load is increased to simulate the actual load when driving on the road.
7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 0 20 40 Speed (kph) 60 80 100
Modeled load vs. Speed for a typical small motorcycle and rider
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Chassis Dyno should hold engine to "max speed" at engine's peak power. This should be adjustable based on dyno settings (ie. should be able to stall out engine at lower speed by adding more load)
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Speed (kph)
The older Federal Test Procedure was designed in the early 1970s and only updated in 2006. The newest drive cycle features peak speeds of 130 kph and cruising at 110 kph. We need to ask our selves, do these US drive cycles really reflect how vehicles are used here? What about motorcycle and other light vehicles?
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Speed (kph)
FTP US06
Test Time (s)
50
100
200
250
300
The answer is: The US Drive Cycles do not reflect how vehicles are used here. This is why we need to define our own Malaysian drive cycles.
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40 30 20 10 0 0 10 20
Time (s)
30
40
50
60
The engine operates at some torque loads more than others. We need to test at the most common torques and speeds experienced by the bike
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30 20 10 0 0
10
20
Time (s)
30
40
50
60
Common Torque (given at Chassis Dyno) loads on this bike are: 0 Nm (idle, or coasting) 7 Nm, 14 Nm, and 22 Nm NOTE: We have neglected rolling friction and wind friction in the model
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Engine Speed
30 20 10 0 0 10 20 30
Time (s)
40
50
We need to determine the most common speed/torque points to test at RED lines indicate common speeds for some common torques: 7 Nm at 1800 rpm, 14 Nm at 4750 rpm, 24 Nm at 5000 rpm
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Speed (rpm)
The average FC (gm/min) is calculated from each test point as: FCAV = 0.1 FC1 + 0.4 FC2 + 0.3 FC3 + 0.2 FC4 Average Velocity (kph) is: Vav = 0.1 V1 + 0.4 V2 + 0.3 V3 + 0.2 V4 Field fuel mileage (km/l) is now: FMfield = Vav / ( FCav x 60min/hr / 720gm/liter )
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FCAV = 0.1 (2) + 0.4 (5) + 0.3 (12) + 0.2 (18) = 9.4 gm/min Vav = 0.1 (0) + 0.4 (15) + 0.3 (30) + 0.2 (45) = 24 kph Field fuel mileage (km/l) is now: FMfield = 24 / ( 9.4 x 60 / 720 ) = 30.6 km/l With careful selection and weighting of test points the predicted mileage should agree to within ~10% of the actual field mileage for a wide range of vehicles.
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Typical Data from 125cc 2-stroke Tricycles looked like this: Test Point Idle 1 2 3 4 5 Direct Fuel Injection HC CO AFR 500 0.2 25+ 600 0.5 25+ 500 1.5 25 800 3 15 1200 4 14.5 1500 4 14.5 Carbureted HC CO 6000 3 4000 3 3000 3 3000 3 2500 3 3000 7 AFR 13 13 14 14 14 14
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DC Motor
AC Generator
Input Voltage Divider Input Current
Controller
Output Voltage Divider Output Current
Load
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2500 Fuel Weight 2000 RPM -or- W -or- grams Engine Speed
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20
1000
Electrical Power
10
500
FC gm/min
1500
15
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Mechanical Power
Nm
Power Outpt 1047 W (Torque x Speed rad/sec) Break Thermal Efficiency Pout/Pin 23.8% Power Input 4400 W (Chem Energy x FC gm/sec)
Power Input
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6.0
8000
HC 36 deg.
Torque 27 deg.
4.0
6000 4000
3.0 2.0
2000
HC 27 deg.
1.0
0 260 240 220 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 SOI (degrees BTDC)
0.0
Injector Signal
PFI ECU
Shifted Trigger Pulse:
Injector
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Torque
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 Speed (rpm)
2800 2600 Engine Speed (rpm ) 2400 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 Time (min) 210 240 270 300
Std. Piston + TiC Rings Ti Piston + TiC Rings Std. Piston and Rings
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Moderate Acceleration
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Questions?
Please be sure to fill out the survey forms. If you have any questions in the future, or would like additional help in this are feel free to contact me: Dr. Horizon Gitano-Briggs + (6016) 484-6524 [email protected]
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