Drop the attitude, if you were to put your hand across the exhaust manifold there would be a lot more pressure there, than at the back of the exhaust. Temperature drop across the pipe alone would cause a fair decrease in pressure. (as said above by Ben)that's because it's on tickover.... why don't you try going flat out wedge the throttle and then climb out the window over the car and then try that. owe you fell off. shame.
"You want to use this naff all airflow to spin up a turbo? You're mad!"
no one said i wanted to and after all your started it... little bit of sarcasm and you think i have a bad attitude. clearly there is not naff all air flow other wise these systems wouldn't work. Also i have not been sectioned so on both accounts you are wrong. hence my tonque in cheek reply. however i am sorry i upset you.
Colder air is denser than hot air might I add. :rasp:Drop the attitude, if you were to put your hand across the exhaust manifold there would be a lot more pressure there, than at the back of the exhaust. Temperature drop across the pipe alone would cause a fair decrease in pressure. (as said above by Ben)
As for having the throttle fully down. Ok, you'l loose low end rev efficiency then?
.you seem to feel very strongly about this rear turbo idea, do you work for balancemotorsport or something
Colder air is denser than hot air might I add. :rasp:
I thought it was just the movement of air?turbos are run by heat energy though
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since i read about the rear mount thing in PPC i have read a lot of posts on a lot of forums it generates a lot of haters and comments where people don't think - i have to admit to becoming a bit of rear mount advocate
wot do you reckon about them ?
How would the air intake cope with the negative air pressure generated under most cars?
agreed ^ you can see the logic and for a low boost cheap setup then its an alternative to the conventional method. But anyone who is serious about wanting more power (eg worthwhile boost) would have to go the conventional way.
both methods have pro's and con's and both have thier place. The kit shown on that 205 looks rough as houses in all fairness so id imagine with a bit of clever and neat engineering it could work quite well.
nice to see people think outside the box though. certainly gives us something to ponder over each day!
good point and also most cars don't generate downforce they generate lift so the air under the car isn't negative pressure or is it?Well seeing that we are talking about turbos here, no doubt that won't be a problem. The turbo will just make negative pressure positive up stream of the compressor.
what was the deal with that thing the wrc boys were doing not long ago, pressure tank in the boot or whatever it was
My hero:hail:Exactly that. Anti-lag meant they had turbo speed for much more 'time' than they required to produce steady state peak inducted air mass requirement (for want of a better term). As such they wouldn't waste the energy but use it to compress air mass into a storage tank which was then released under conditions where either the anti-lag wasn't able to acheive compressor speed quickly enough or they required even greater levels of airmass to produce torque for short periods of time.
Essentialy it got around the air restrictor rule as all inducted air mass had passed through the spec restrictor....... just that it wasn't all used for combustion at once ;-)
Oh and guess who did the control systems for it
Cheers
M