Fred,
I once did a haphazard test with exhaust
thrust. In that example, the result was any reduction in exhaust pipe
exit area (to increase nozzle speed) resulted in power loss. I guess that
means I should’ve opened up the exhaust system.
Would it be possible to post a copy of the
paper you speak of? Or email a copy? I really appreciate the read.
Perhaps two shrunk neurotics would have a chance of assimilation? I’d
love the study.
Larry
From: Fred Moreno
[mailto:fredmoreno@optusnet.com.au]
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2008
1:46 PM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: [LML] Cold Induction,
Power, and Speed
“There is a free lunch - or at least a cheap one.”
Right you are,
Scotty! I merely was pointing out that one has to pay for more
horsepower, or work for drag reductions.
However…..
There may be another
nearly free lunch. Exhaust thrust.
I have a WWII NACA tech
paper discussing the theoretical and experimental work done to determine the
potential thrust from the exhaust of aspirated piston engines. The faster
you go, the more effective it can be. So after evaluating all the cooling
drag reduction work I have done, I plan to work on this area next.
First I will have to
wade through all the equations and data and attempt to understand and interpret
it with my ever-shrinking neuronal capacity. That is a project for the latter
half of the year. Trading more back pressure (and presumably some power loss)
for thrust improvement (via exhaust nozzles) is an interesting trade-off.
It is not a simple one.
“Combining power gains with drag reductions [and perhaps some augmentation of exhaust thrust]
results in significantly greater performance.”
Want to try some
experiments?
J
Fred, AKA
Captain Tuna, Chicken of
the Skies