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Adamal wrote:Harro, this your captain speaking. Wercome to fright free nine five to Werrington
EP71-4age wrote:Give QikStarlie on this or the StarletCentral website a PM as he's know all about the ACIS induction and has some pretty awesome ideas for running it in a turbo application.
My spare EP71 has a 5efhe conversion and had up till recently just run the normal 4efte inlet manifold. Recently thou, Qikstarlie (while borrowing the car) swapped the 5efhe ACIS manifold on and found a fair gain of torque down low. We don't have quite the right solinoid setup to controll the ACIS so its more of a off/on affair rather than a smooth transition between the two but its goes a fair bit better and skins up un provoked in low gears now.
Cozmo wrote:so, when not using boost (vac only) then you have a single runner, and when you plant it / use boost, tvis butterfly's open, causing a larger entrance for boost / flow.
RedMist wrote:TVIS and ACIS are NOT the same thing.
TVIS is an attempt to get greater velocity into the port by effectively shutting off half the port. Smaller diameter port = greater velocity, greater velocity = fuel in suspension in lower RPM, which in turn means more HP at lower RPM.
ACIS is an attempt at inlet tuning length. Open ACIS and the inlet track is much longer. Longer inlet generally equals more mid to low end power using Helmholtz theroy. ACIS closes, shorter inlet track, more up end power. NOTE HOWEVER THAT THE HELMHOLTZ CALCULATIONS ARE CYLINDER VOLUME AND PRESSURE SENSITIVE. IE place a helmholtz resonator designed for one engine on a different cc engine and it WON'T work at the designed RPM. Pressureize an engine and again the helmholtz resonance changes so it WON'T WORK.
TVIS and ACIS may have the same outcome, that of generating more low end torque. However they use different principal. TVIS will probably work in a compressed situation, however ACIS will NOT unless you change the lengths involved.
Saying TVIS and ACIS is the same thing is like saying VVT and VTEC are the same.
In regards to Helmholtz, its used to pack the cylinder closer to full or over full by using the spring effect inherant in air. Obviously by changing the amount of air your packing into a cylinder you'll change the helmholtz length and likewise if you change the pressure the spring rate of the air will also change.
http://www.users.bigpond.com/pgscott/re ... oustic.htm
pc wrote:Sounds good to me. Wouldn't you want your switching method to take into account RPM and boost?
i.e if RPM above 4000 OR boost above 5psi then open butterflies. With controllers in the cabin you could play with settings till it feels right, or use dyno if feeling rich.
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