He is???Quote: Originally posted by 1.6 16v on 06 January 2004
im sure i saw slarty was back on another post or is this my mistake?
Thanks Ben!!Quote: Originally posted by BenR on 07 January 2004
as with all cam timing the simple basis is increasing the duration that any one valve is open during its component stroke the more air your can get in (forget fuel as its not a primary function you need to worry about) and the more air means more VE, the larger the VE the larger the torque result from the pressure rise and thus more power. The reason why pwoer tails off is because VE tails off.
Overlap is the situation you get where the inelt valves and exhasut valves are open together for a the few degrees of crankshaft rotation the cam specs specify. This is on the exhaust/intake stroke only and you can make use of relative negative pressure zones in teh exhaust port and inertia ramming on teh inlet to provide an earlier filling of the cylidner, despite the fact that the piston is moving up, not down.
Jay, (what the hells going on with my font colours, i aint touched it!) it does help idle......try pahsing ti at idle and the 16deg ad that would be there all the time, if it were not for teh simple depahse, makes the car idle horribly.
its purpose is not to help idle but if you did phase it at idle it would idle crap but thats commen sense.its purpose is to increase torque when needed(at full throttle) but still allow the engine to pass current emissions laws.all new 16v engines have no or very little valve overlap due to the affect on emissions. of course it would idle crap if you activated vvt at idle due to that amount of cam advance is only benficial at the conditions i stated in my previous post.apart from full throttle vvt is unactive so has no purpose when at idle or normal driving.Quote: Originally posted by BenR on 07 January 2004
as with all cam timing the simple basis is increasing the duration that any one valve is open during its component stroke the more air your can get in (forget fuel as its not a primary function you need to worry about) and the more air means more VE, the larger the VE the larger the torque result from the pressure rise and thus more power. The reason why pwoer tails off is because VE tails off.
Overlap is the situation you get where the inelt valves and exhasut valves are open together for a the few degrees of crankshaft rotation the cam specs specify. This is on the exhaust/intake stroke only and you can make use of relative negative pressure zones in teh exhaust port and inertia ramming on teh inlet to provide an earlier filling of the cylidner, despite the fact that the piston is moving up, not down.
Jay, (what the hells going on with my font colours, i aint touched it!) it does help idle......try pahsing ti at idle and the 16deg ad that would be there all the time, if it were not for teh simple depahse, makes the car idle horribly.
Quote: Originally posted by Colin_S on 19 January 2004
VVT alloys the inlet and exhaust valves to be open at the same time (overlap) when you increase the revs. If this overlap was there during idle your car would idle very bad. The reason that it is ok during higher revs is that the valves open and shut faster the higher you rev so the actual time the valves over lap is not that long during high revs but woudl be open far to long at low revs.
The VVT comes in at exactly the time you want it to as if it was any earlier the car would not run right
Quote: Originally posted by BenR on 19 January 2004
but at full throttle it already kicks in very early.
Jay, the point i was making, coupled with yours, is that if it was there primarily to increase torque (its not sophisticated to help anything power wise) then why would it kick in so early at low rpm on full throttle....thus negating any of the benefits of no overlap and more timid timing at low rpm and port velocities.