Return-Path: Sender: (Marvin Kaye) To: lml Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 09:04:39 -0400 Message-ID: X-Original-Return-Path: Received: from pop3.olsusa.com ([63.150.212.2] verified) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 4.0b7) with ESMTP id 1737055 for lml@lancaironline.net; Thu, 19 Sep 2002 00:42:23 -0400 Received: from mta01bw.bigpond.com ([139.134.6.78]) by pop3.olsusa.com (Post.Office MTA v3.5.3 release 223 ID# 0-71866U8000L800S0V35) with ESMTP id com for ; Thu, 19 Sep 2002 00:34:07 -0400 Received: from hostname ([144.135.24.84]) by mta01bw.bigpond.com (Netscape Messaging Server 4.15 mta01bw Jul 16 2002 22:47:55) with SMTP id H2O52J00.4KF for ; Thu, 19 Sep 2002 14:42:19 +1000 Received: from PIPP-p-144-134-197-199.prem.tmns.net.au ([144.134.197.199]) by bwmam06.mailsvc.email.bigpond.com(MailRouter V3.0n 47/14586065); 19 Sep 2002 14:42:15 X-Original-Message-ID: <004201c25f97$df76cb00$c7c58690@direcpc.com> From: "Fred Moreno" X-Original-To: "Lancair list" Subject: Ram Air X-Original-Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 11:40:55 +0800 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.50.4807.1700 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.50.4807.1700 The analysis of ram air benefits needs to consider the entire system from where the air enters the cowl up to the inlet to the carburetor or fuel injection butterfly valve. Many induction systems are simply awful creating major pressure losses while others provide superior recovery of ram pressure and delivery to the engine. Replacing the former with the latter will provide substantial benefits in the form of one to two inches Hg improvements in manifold pressure. Let's take the induction process one step at a time. First step is to slow the oncoming air converting kinetic energy of velocity into the potential energy of increased static pressure. If you mess up this step, you can lose all ram air benefits before entering the induction system. The slowing process occurs ideally in two stages. The first is in front of the cowl as the air slow to go around the blunt leading portions of the air frame. These lead to areas of local high pressure, and this is where you want to take the induction air in from the main stream. Under the spinner is usually a pretty good place. If there is no readily accessible high pressure area (usually a place of negative or concave curvature where the flow streamlines curve AWAY from the centerline of the fuselage), then a scoop may be required. But keep in mind that while a scoop may create a nice source of ram air, improperly placed it can also create a lot of drag. Once the air is slowed externally, it is brought through an opening in the cowl and further slowed, virtually to zero velocity (tens of feet per second, or less) before passing through an air filter. This second stage deceleration is through a duct of increasing cross sectional area called a diffuser, and diffusers are tricky to design well. Suffice it to say that a smooth internal surface with no steps or abrupt changes in cross sectional area or direction is required. The NACA scoop under the spinner of the Lancair IV is a good example of a combined scoop and diffuser and is the result of much testing. The key is to have sufficient area to permit the air flow required by the engine to enter the cowl opening at a low speed, say less than 20-25% of the free stream velocity, perhaps a bit more with the NACA scoop. (Purists and performance nuts should consult the technical papers on NACA scoops for ideal velocity ratios.) Cessna blew it here with the early pressurized 210. They made the NACA inlet scoop too small, appropriate for low altitude, but inappropriate for high altitude thin air. At high altitude, the volume of air necessary is about 2.5 to 3 times the volume at sea level. The small scoop forced the turbo to suck through the scoop like a kid sucking on a soda straw in a milk shake. This resulted in a pressure at the inlet to the turbocharger compressor well below ambient. (A small air cleaner can do the same thing). The compressor then compresses the flow to the required pressure for the engine, and the pressure ratio necessary is quite high because of the relative vacuum at the inlet to the compressor. High pressure ratio yields high temperature ratio, and the induction air temperature to the engine skyrockets. Result: high altitude detonation, and a lot of engines broke up as a result until enlarged inlet scoops were retrofitted to the fleet. Intercoolers were also added in many cases. If you locate the induction air inlet properly and design the diffuser properly, then you can probably get 75% of the total ram pressure, the balance being lost to friction during the deceleration process. If you really work at it you might get 80%+, and this is what the turboprop guys strive for. But it takes a lot of work. Now that the air has been slowed and pressurized, it is time to go through the air filter, and then the duct work into the engine. If the air filter is too small (and I believe most aircraft air filters are too small, particularly for high altitude turbocharged engines), you lose pressure due to friction. Pressure drop in air filters is due to laminar flow in the porous element, and depends on the volume of the air flow, independent of the air density. High performance racing filters are a big help having been compromised in the direction of lower pressure drop, not lower cost as with mass market auto air cleaners. The other thing is to keep the filter dry if possible. Imagine the air filter on a C-172, caked with dust, on the outside of the cowl, facing forward when flying in cloud or rain. The dust turns to mud, clogs the filter, and with more water the mud is drawn through the filter and hopefully runs out the bottom of the ducting somewhere. Better to let a little of the incoming air escape out the bottom of the duct or cowl in front of the filter carrying rain water with it, and let the flow to the air filter make some type of gentle curve sideways or upward to separate the water. Again, the Lancair IV filter can do this with the ring air filter if there is a place for the water to exit out the bottom of the duct (normally not included). Once through the filter, it becomes a question of good duct work design to get to the engine and past carburetor heat boxes or alternate air inlets that permit alternate air entry if the filter ices up. I am of the opinion that this duct work should be sized for air velocities of less than about 100 feet per second and preferably less than 70 feet per second. (Keep in mind on aspirated engines that the inlet flow pulsates a lot as each piston inhales a gulp of air. The pressure drop under these conditions is higher than would occur with an average, steady flow.) The ram pressure of a sea level density stream of air at 100 feet per second is about 0.1 inches of mercury, and it is easy to lose two or three times this amount in a sharp ninety degree bend. Smooth bends with generous radius and rounded corners are best, but difficult to make in sheet metal. Bell mouth inlets to carburetors or fuel injection air inlets also reduce inlet losses. (But think about fuel fires on carbureted engines when building your induction ducting.) Most aircraft installations are square, sharp cornered, and too small in my opinion, and these cause losses in performance. You may argue that if you plane has a turbo, no problem, just push the knob in more to make up for the induction losses, but recall that the turbo must compress the flow more and this raises induction temperature. The problem worsens in the summer time when air density is lower and ambient temperatures are higher. So both aspirated and super charged aircraft can benefit substantially from good induction system design that strives for minimum pressure drop. To recap: 1) Put the induction air inlet location at a high pressure point on the cowl. Under the spinner on in another location of concave curvature is best. Where the flow is parallel to the fuselage centerline and a NACA duct is used is second best. (See Turbo-210 or Turbo-182 NACA inlet scoops for examples.) Regions where the flow curvature is convex (flow curves toward the fuselage centerline) are worst because these are regions of lower pressure and higher local velocity, and it is harder to recover the ram pressure from a high velocity region. But you may have no choice, and have to do the best you can. 2) Make the inlet generously sized so that the flow that enters the throat of the inlet is no more than 20-25% of the free stream velocity. This will reduce subsequent friction losses in the diffuser. 3) Be careful in diffuser design and construction to complete the flow deceleration smoothly without major bends or discontinuities in cross sectional area. 4) Have a big enough air filter, and try to let the water separate and flow out of the diffuser duct before passing through the air filter. 5) After passing through the air filter, keep duct size generous with smooth changes in cross sectional area and radiused bends without sharp corners. This is hard to do in sheet metal, but very beneficial if you are fuel injected and can use carefully fabricated curving, smooth composite ducts in areas where there is no chance of a fuel fire. Hope this helps. Ram pressure is free horsepower. Scoop it up. Fred Moreno