stephendell wrote:
However in a GTA the Atmo (odd fire) engine always feels smoother and revs better (easier) than the Turbo (even fire).
That will be down to cams, induction and ecu too though. R25 V6's even fire rev lovely...
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Tue Apr 12, 2005 12:24 am
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David Gentleman wrote:. An evenfire will sit quite happily at say 600rpm, but an oddfire will shudder a bit at low revs.
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Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
Colchester, Essex
Stunned Monkey wrote:The first even fire engine was the Z7U and I reckon this had to have evenly spaced inlet valves opening because otherwise one bank would end up with more air than the other, being forced induction.
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Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
Colchester, Essex
Stunned Monkey wrote:
I've had a high lifft cam odd-fire engine running efi and idling as smooth as silk at 600rpm. This was a complete accident and we were all very surprised. In other words, give it accurate fuel delivery and it's happy.
The TT DeLorean, running spot on at idle generates a wobble that's very visible on the car it's in because the bonnet fit is poor and it's beautifully amplified and judders up and down all the time.
!
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Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
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Stunned Monkey wrote:
We'll have to agree to disagree.... I've heard it from several sources that the odd fire engines were inherantly smooth. Why they varied the cam timing by 2 degrees left to right is still open to debate but I'll let you compare a -DeLorean- engine at idle next to a GTA turbo. I think you'll find the DeLorean's fuel injection smoother than a Carbed ATMO.
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Tue Apr 12, 2005 12:24 am
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mettersl wrote:
When you (mathmatically) look at the forces created by engines (eg pistons moving up and down) you find that the ideal engine is a straight 6 or a flat 12.
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Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
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Stunned Monkey wrote:mettersl wrote:
When you (mathmatically) look at the forces created by engines (eg pistons moving up and down) you find that the ideal engine is a straight 6 or a flat 12.
Edumacate me on this - I thought it was the Flat 4 - like the old Beetle engine, a so-called "boxer" engine because the pistons are paired and 180 degrees out of phase meanging they fight each-other like a boxer..... or does that engine oscillate about the centre line, viewed from above?
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Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
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mettersl wrote:I'm not brave enough to continue- and I've lost the text book anyway.
As I said mechanical balance isn't the only factor - and after all, you can't really change it can you!
Ok Dave I know you have a 4 cylinder GTA, but that's not a flat 4........
Cheers
Lee
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