At R rpm, one rev takes 60000/R ms.
E degrees, the exhaust duration from EO to EC, takes E/360 of a rev.
So, rotating the crank through E degrees takes (60000 * E) / (360 * R) ms. = (1000 * E) / (6 *R).
The distance travelled by a wave at the speed of sound S in this time is
S * (1000 * E) / (6 * R) or 166.666 * S * E / R
At Rmax, we want this to be the time for this wave to reach the end of the baffle cone and return to the cylinder,
hence the distance from cylinder to baffle cone must be half the distance travelled by the wave,
i.e. 83.333 * S * E / R
Pretty sure...
I think you are right, the answer is in the "Speed of Sound", because its the speed of sound at what temperature?
And the temperature, it is variable along the pipe, and the wave travels faster in the regions of higher temperature.
What is the average gas temperature you are using for your pipe calculations?
If I am right about this, hopefully we will both get a chocolate fish.
The speed of sound is relative to density, no? The temperature is indicative of that, but not perfect. The material that the waves are bouncing off and reducing at the same time is changeable too with being welded and stressed.
Is it possible to bypass the pipe fuckery and fire a pulse back up the exhaust port of ones own creation? Make it of a register so low it is barely perceptable, and the volume of the bike stays nice and civil.
Just a thought. Might go and mount a subwoofer and amp to the GT and see what happens.
Some squat is accepted as an absolute must on proper bikes. If it is tuned out with a steep swingarm such as that bike, the drive force is fighting the suspension and you sacrifice traction.
Might be alright with twenty or thirty ponies to ride (but could be better), but pump a hundred and ninty through the tread and things get...interesting on corner exit.
When Frits posted it He said something along the lines of....... it was meant to be a simple formula to put you in the ball park.
He said the more complicated formula he uses is based on complex data and measurements
but no matter how complicated it will still need testing and verification.
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
So, if your 150 will rev to 14000 and you have a BMEP of 247.6 (that would have to be an absolute max), you will see 40HP. Probably revs higher and BMEP a little lower in reality.
100cc, if it was up to the Aprilia 125 BMEP ( 211.85 ) would produce 44HP at 13500 RPM.
These calculations are just out of Graham Bells book, so just a good guide.
My Aprilia BMEP figure might be a little high as I calculated it at 55 HP, 13500 RPM.
If the 100cc twostroke was a twin, say, and reved to 15500, you might see 50 / 51 ish HP
The truth is trying to get these BMEP's would be very difficult.
So lets supercharge our 100cc fourstroke say 365.5 BMEP? at say ( it's a twin ) 16000 rpm,
45HP.
Just some random figures I know but never the less interesting.
Interesting numbers all right, yes once 20hp was considered good and divided the pretty good from the average, now it seems that the benchmark is going to become 30hp.
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
I had the same issue and was told sounds travel faster in hot air
http://www.thenakedscientists.com/fo...?topic=11505.0
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/calculator-speedsound.htm
I do have the number used somewhere but can't find it. I was told to reverse calculate it
Lets quote real figures for what can be achieved with a genius called Thiel in charge of over 100 people in a race dept R&D facility.
The best an RSA made was 58 crank Hp ( assume +5% over sprocket dyno power ) at 13000 rpm.
This is 16 Bar ( 232 psi ) bmep at the crank - here is the sim graph.
Take that bmep and apply it to a 100cc water cooled with 50 by 50 bore stroke.
Assume peak power at 14,000 ( easy ) and we have 49 crank - less 12% to read on a Dynojet and thats 43 RWHP.
No trick shit technology,no weird ideas, just great attention to every detail.
Can it be done, for sure, just not when you start with a 30 year old crankcase and an iron sleeve in a road bike 125 cylinder.
Ive got a thing thats unique and new.To prove it I'll have the last laugh on you.Cause instead of one head I got two.And you know two heads are better than one.
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