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George, I've done a bit of this. To get an
airflow in CFM to a fuel Flow in Gallons per minute
I start with
your airflow of 173.6 CFM and convert that to mass air flow rather than volume
because the air/fuel ratio is based on mass ratio not volume ratio.
The reason for this is that a cubic foot of fuel will weigh the same
everywhere but a cubic foot of air will weigh differently at different air
densities (altitudes). I'll use the notation of Ft^3 (foot cube) for CF
and Ft^2 (foot squared) for Sq ft as it makes it easier to show where units
cancel out.
At sea level the mass/weigth of 1 cubic foot of air is around
0.076 lbm/Ft^3 (of air). So with 173.6 Ft^3/Min * 0.076
lbm/Ft^3 = 13.1936 lbm/minute of air(the two CFM or Ft^3 factors cancel
out leaving you with units of pounds mass (lbm) per minute). Then taking
your air/fuel ratio value of 14.7 we have 13.1936 /14.7 = 0.8975 lbm/minute of
fuel.
Various figures are used for weight of gasoline depending in part
on its octane. The most common use figure is 6 lbs/ gallon, so I'll use
that figure.
So 1 minute at your flow rate we have 0.8975 Lbm/Min /
6 lb/gal = 0.149587 Gal/Min or in more conventional terms 0.149587 gal/min * 60
min/hour = 8.975 Gal/hour fuel flow for that air flow and
air/fuel ratio.
There are other approaches, but unless I've screwed up
this should be pretty close to the answer.
For inlet, you take the CFM
and you need one other factor - what velocity do you want through your
inlet? Lets say you want a higher velocity of around 176 feet/sec (120
MPH) then we know that Volume = Area * length. If were want 176
feet/sec velocity from 176 CFM air flow then coverting CFM to cubic feet per
second were have 176Ft^3/min / 60 Second/Minute = 29.333 Ft^3/
Second
So solving for Area (of opening) =
Volume/Length = 2.9333Ft^3/sec/ 175 Ft/Sec = .01676 Ft^2of area which
is 0.01676Ft^2 * 144 inch^2/Ft^2 = 2.4137 inch^2 of opening for that
assumed velocity.
Again, if I haven't screwed up for an air velocity
through the opening of 176 feet/sec that would be the opening size. If you
wanted slower air flow then the area of the opening would increase, faster and
it would decrease up to a choke point where the air flow would flow no
faster.
Hope that helped
Ed NOT LYnn ----- Original Message
----- From: George Lendich To: Rotary motors in aircraft Sent:
Sunday, July 29, 2007 7:10 PM Subject: [FlyRotary] Air/fuel
flow
Lynn, Following from previous post from your self, I'm
looking at AIR FLOW and FUEL FLOW for my single rotor. EG [40 cu" per face x
3 ( 7,500/3)]/1728 = 173.6 CFM( Air)/ 14.7 ( Ratio)= 11.8 cfm (
Fuel) 40x3x2,000/1728=138CFM( Air)/14.7( ratio)=9.44cfm(
fuel) Question, 1. how does one convert cfm to Gallons per minute? 2.
how does one convert CFM to diameter of inlet? George ( down
under)
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