When the SCCA forced us rotary people to use racing gas Darryl Drummond
Dynoed one engine with both fuels Street high test 97 Octane and VP 110 Octane
racing. The racing fuel cost 4 HP over the street gas. The SCCA relented and we
got to use street gas again.
You get the power back from racing gas by running 14:1 compression
ratios.
I use 87 Octane for racing. No alcohol of course.
Alcohol
=
80,000 BTUs.
Typical street motor fuel
regular no alcohol = 119,000 BTUs.
Low sulphur #2 diesel= 130,000 BTUs.
Bunker C
(Used on old ships) = 145,000 BTUs
The turbo charged rotary should be thought of as a different engine. Only
similar to a rotary.
The boost allows for over filling the chamber with mixture so that the
engine is (in effect) larger in displacement. This increased volume of mixture
is compressed into the same head space as the NA engine, so the effective
compression ratio goes up. Maybe way up dependent on boost pressure. So
the compression ratio becomes variable as the RPM go up and down. More boost
means higher heat of compression, so if more than a few pounds are used, an
intercooler is used to reduce the intake air temperature.
Remember that detonation is charge temperature dependent.
The turbo engine is typically more efficient than the NA engine due to the
higher effective compression ratio. The cold combustion chamber helps in
the turbo so higher boost can be used without detonation problems. Less unburned
fuel is left behind, and what is keeps energy to the turbo high. Energy removed
from the exhaust to spin the turbo reduces muffling problems. For high
boost engines the ignition map is nearly backwards. At high boost the timing
comes back towards zero advance, as flame speeds in the high pressure chamber go
way up. The ignition system must be programmable.
Lynn E. Hanover