Moderator: The Mod Squad
fivebob wrote:Boost is a measure of restriction at a given flow rate. That is all, it is not a measure of potential HP. Having more boost does not always mean you'll make more HP.
Grrrrrrr! wrote:fivebob wrote:Boost is a measure of restriction at a given flow rate. That is all, it is not a measure of potential HP. Having more boost does not always mean you'll make more HP.
While this is true, if the only change is increased boost, then the result is more power.
Grrrrrrr! wrote:While this is true, if the only change is increased boost, then the result is more power. If the intercooler is capable of keeping the temps under control then more pressure = more power, assuming fuelling and knock don't become limiting factors.
strx7 wrote:but you are talking about increasing VOLUME aswell as boost, which is how you make more power.
.
Grrrrrrr! wrote:
No, no change in volume.
siren676 wrote:I could use you guys on another forum im on, someone is planning of hooking up a scuba tank to an intake on a n/a engine thinking that 3000psi=more power
Quint wrote:Not just cock, large cock.
Dell'Orto wrote:siren676 wrote:I could use you guys on another forum im on, someone is planning of hooking up a scuba tank to an intake on a n/a engine thinking that 3000psi=more power
Holy shit I want to see this in action. Imagine if he plumbed it up behind the throttle plates
fivebob wrote:Grrrrrrr! wrote:fivebob wrote:Boost is a measure of restriction at a given flow rate. That is all, it is not a measure of potential HP. Having more boost does not always mean you'll make more HP.
While this is true, if the only change is increased boost, then the result is more power.
No, if the only change is increased boost then there is a power decrease.
pV=nRT. (V)olume is fixed, R is a constant, so an increase (p)ressure without an increase in (n)umber of molecules results in an increase in (T)emperature only.
If however flow is increased along with boost then there may be a power increase, providing that the increase in temperature is not too great.
It's all about flow, boost is just easier to observe
Flannelman wrote:Increasing molecular density is the technical term for pressure.
Increasing density without increasing temperature is impossible. See, when molecular density increases, it is being compressed. No matter how small or large the compression, there is heat created.
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 13 guests