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Lehanover@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 12/13/2007 4:53:29 PM Eastern Standard Time, lendich@optusnet.com.au writes:
Their comments on the technology are as mentioned before either high compression or intake heating are required. Supercharging or intake is also a way to high cylinder pressure. Right now they say that the trouble for the tech is controlling the timing event. They say the system works well but doesn't transition to high load well. Right now another hopeful technology that's not ready quite yet.
Bill Jepson
About 30 years ago a guy named Yanuck built a V-2 from part of a small block Chevy. It had a small turbo to maintain positive inlet pressure and the exhaust system strung through the inlet manifold. It was mounted in an old Mercury Capri. It would pull away from a stop at near zero RPM in top gear. It had the Capri carb. Got great milage. Never detonated. Was quiet.
GM engineers drove it with him in the seat beside them. One couldn't believe that the exhaust system was coiled inside the intake, so he put his hand on it and burned himself comprehensively.
Smokey was paid to work on various projects for GM. This car and engine were not on the GM list, and was all Smokys ideas. He wanted to maintain control of the idea, and GM wanted to buy it outright. So instead of buying a license from Smokey and being the top of the heap today, GM shoved the pistol down behind their belt buckle and pulled the trigger.
Smokey disassembled the engine and crushed the car. The superheated intake idea and its refined effective systems died with smokey. And still the struggle goes on to achieve what has been done so long ago.
Lynn E. Hanover
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smokey_Yunick
Unbelievable genius. He used to write for 'Popular Science' magazine back in the '60s. One of my favorite writers when I was a kid. Built a small block Camaro that outran the big block cars on the NASCAR tracks back then.
Charlie
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