No idea google suggests early was uncoated and later it seems were "fluorine resin coated. ."
No idea what the heck that is or if its crap or gospel?
I was only going off what used to happen on the MR2 superchargers when they were speeding up in regards to not running the boost too high.
edit if it does have it It seems to be a plastic coating Mazda made for the wankel.
https://patents.justia.com/patent/4645440
later looks like a similar product to Telflon?
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics...aining-polymer
https://www.gunze.co.jp/e/epd/aboutfluoride/
Fluorine resin can be used to various applications like non-stick frying pan, semiconductor, OA equipment, automobiles and general industrial machinery, has been active in a wide range of fields.Its the net who knows whats real or fake queueshttps://www.drilube.co.jp/english/product/fluorine.html
In addition, fluorine resin has various chemical resistance, corrosion resistance, heat resistance and electrical insulation properties.
The coefficient of friction of DRILUBE® products containing fluorine resin is in the range of 0.03-0.1. Products utilizing this low frictional property demonstrate excellent lubrication under light load conditions, and a stable sliding performance can also be expected.
DRILUBE® products containing fluorine resin, and utilizing the property of non-cohesion with fluorine resin, can be applied to mold release uses.
DRILUBE® products containing fluorine resin are currently being used in various industrial fields.
![]()
Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
PTFE Polytetrafluoroethylene is a synthetic fluoropolymer of tetrafluoroethylene that has numerous applications. The commonly known brand name of PTFE-based compositions is Teflon by Chemours, a spin-off from DuPont, which originally discovered the compound in 1938.
So it looks like there is fluorine of some sort in there
(message says this is too short and wants 10 characters?)
it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
(PostalDave on ADVrider)
In my supercharged Honda 100 I cut dovetails in the tips of the rotors, and slid in a teflon type tip seal. Helped with the delivery pressure for sure. The teflon strip was given to me by some drag racer, a common upgrade.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
It is not the mechanical efficiency I worry about but the thermal one. The manufacturer only characterize it to 1.8bar while Alex wants to run much higher. Just extrapolating the curves to 3bar will already heat the air to well over 300degC if it can reach that and absorb lots of power. Hopefully I am wrong...
Heat and methanol, symbiotic relationship.
Yes and yes. Our locally made "Martin" roots blower used a teflon rubbing strip on the tips of the rotors - but we finished up having to trim about .015in off each end of the rotors due to growth when hot. Only lost 2PSI though.
The main problem historically with roots type though is churning which is a great heat source. Ours had division bars on inlet and output shaped to occupy wasted volume between the rotors. Talking to the guy who designed and developed them, he'd tested them to around 18,000 rpm - bolted to his lathe with a datsun gearbox used as a stepup for rpm. Reckoned they were 80% efficient to about 10,000 rpm but dropped off after that.
We were able to tell him ours didn't drop off boost up to 15,000rpm.
Anything above about 1.5bar you should really look at running a second blower in series - 2 stage blowing. The mathematics of it were proved before WW2.
My experience is with blown 4 strokes - but yes, if you haven't got enough exhaust duration and flow volume you will hit a wall.
As a side note, I was told by a very experienced - and qualified - engineer, don't try and run a tuned pipe with a blower. Forget returning charge - all you want to do is empty the cylinder as quickly as possible. Let the blower do the work.
The successful way to supercharge a two stroke is to raise the exhaust pressure along with the intake pressure. This was done a long time ago with the Napier Nomad. Today snowmobiles use a turbocharger after the tuned pipe to do the same thing. The engine pictured below is an extreme example that developed around 800 hp with nitrous injection.
Lohring Miller
![]()
There are currently 21 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 21 guests)
Bookmarks