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Old 04-10-2010   #1
tpepmeie
 
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Default Inlet length tuning

Little slow this weekend, so I thought I'd share some simulation results of various intake lengths. The stock runner length is a little long, but offers a very good torque curve, yet still allows peak power at 7000 rpm. Here is a simulation showing volumetric efficiency of my 427, using the stock inlet tract length. The green line is volumetric efficiency.



Volumetric efficiency peaks at 6400 rpm, and 5200. The latter being close to the torque peak.

Here is a simulation with a very short runner, sheetmetal type intake. Runner length is some 4.5" shorter than stock. VE peaks at 7200, and again at 6100. The overall peak VE is substantially lower, about 7.5% less. In this config, I would expect hp to peak around 7500.



And here are the two graphs on top of each other.



To better isolate the intake tuning peaks, I have performed this simulation with a "stub" exhaust length, rather than full headers. The headers and collector would smooth out the troughs, and pick up VE by about 3 pct at peak.

So what does it all mean? We'll the stock intake length is about the best for a peak power speed at 7000, although even the best ported setups have at least 20-25cfm flow loss. If we could get the minimal flow loss of the fabricated manifold, but the tuned length of the stock system, that would be as good as it could get.

Todd
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Old 04-10-2010   #2
Paul Workman
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

Quote:
Originally Posted by tpepmeie View Post
Little slow this weekend, so I thought I'd share some simulation results of various intake lengths. The stock runner length is a little long, but offers a very good torque curve, yet still allows peak power at 7000 rpm. Here is a simulation showing volumetric efficiency of my 427, using the stock inlet tract length. The green line is volumetric efficiency.



Volumetric efficiency peaks at 6400 rpm, and 5200. The latter being close to the torque peak.

Here is a simulation with a very short runner, sheetmetal type intake. Runner length is some 4.5" shorter than stock. VE peaks at 7200, and again at 6100. The overall peak VE is substantially lower, about 7.5% less. In this config, I would expect hp to peak around 7500.



And here are the two graphs on top of each other.



To better isolate the intake tuning peaks, I have performed this simulation with a "stub" exhaust length, rather than full headers. The headers and collector would smooth out the troughs, and pick up VE by about 3 pct at peak.

So what does it all mean? We'll the stock intake length is about the best for a peak power speed at 7000, although even the best ported setups have at least 20-25cfm flow loss. If we could get the minimal flow loss of the fabricated manifold, but the tuned length of the stock system, that would be as good as it could get.

Todd
Question for ya Todd... Is this model run with stock cross sectional runner areas, or cross section dimensions you now have?

P.
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Old 04-10-2010   #3
tpepmeie
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

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Originally Posted by Paul Workman View Post
Question for ya Todd... Is this model run with stock cross sectional runner areas, or cross section dimensions you now have?

P.
Its my current configuration. Different areas won't change the location of the peaks, but may change the strength of the pulse. Taper, on the other hand, will change the effective length. More taper = tunes like a shorter runner, but loses a little strength.
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Old 04-11-2010   #4
Pete
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

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Originally Posted by tpepmeie View Post
=
So what does it all mean? We'll the stock intake length is about the best for a peak power speed at 7000, although even the best ported setups have at least 20-25cfm flow loss. If we could get the minimal flow loss of the fabricated manifold, but the tuned length of the stock system, that would be as good as it could get.

Todd

Todd,stacks might be a happy medium

What was the loss with the sheet matel intake?


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Old 04-11-2010   #5
tpepmeie
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

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Originally Posted by Pete View Post
Todd,stacks might be a happy medium

What was the loss with the sheet matel intake?


Pete
We'll find out soon. I have to pack it up with a mile of bubble wrap and send it out for testing. The sims above suprised me a little. Granted, I did not account for the added flow from the fabricated manifold, I was only trying to account for the runner length. Maybe I'll try that today. ... Just tried it with zero flow loss on the fabricated manifold, and it made little difference. picked up the curve by about 1% VE, but still well behind the longer intake. Appears that wave tuning is more important that outright flow.

Last edited by tpepmeie; 04-11-2010 at 09:13 AM.
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Old 04-11-2010   #6
XfireZ51
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

Todd,

THanks for sharing that information. What would you speculate is the effect of siamesing the runners?
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Old 04-11-2010   #7
tpepmeie
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

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Todd,

THanks for sharing that information. What would you speculate is the effect of siamesing the runners?
Siamesing, in our case, has the effect of increasing cross-sectional area. I would expect pulse strength to be reduced. The Gen II LT5 and import 4-valve heads had siamesed runners, but were designed that way...therefore the overall cross section was controlled using one mono-runner. In our case, the port spacing was set using 2 separate runners, so siamesing from there results in really big cross-section areas, IMO.
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Old 04-11-2010   #8
4DSZR1
 
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Default Re: Inlet length tuning

Question

When you talk about intake runner length and tuning and the importance of it when looking at torque and HP Is this why some of the old hillborne injection systems had the tall stacks?

Thanks

Rick
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