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-   -   Friday 2010-12-17 Dev. update and Discussion (http://forum.fulqrumpublishing.com/showthread.php?t=17694)

swiss 12-20-2010 10:47 AM

edit: cleaned this thread and removed my OT posts

T}{OR 12-20-2010 11:03 AM

EDIT: same as swiss

ElAurens 12-20-2010 11:17 AM

The P38 was powered by a pair of V12 Allisons that were turbocharged.

T}{OR 12-20-2010 11:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ElAurens (Post 205604)
The P38 was powered by a pair of V12 Allisons that were turbocharged.

And that is why its exhaust is different than the one found on planes equipped with Merlin engines (single engined fighters).


Back to the flames etc. Here is a nice example of modification done to prevent visible exhaust flames during night fighting:

http://www.military-aircraft.org.uk/...0g-fighter.jpg

peterwoods@supanet.com 12-20-2010 11:36 AM

Re turbochargers: According to Wiki (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce_Merlin)

In 1940 Rolls-Royce considered adapting the Merlin to use an exhaust-driven turbocharger to increase the power of the Merlin. Although a lower fuel consumption was an advantage, the turbocharger was rejected in favour of a two-stage supercharger.
[Lovesey 1946, p. 220]

Most of the Merlin's technical improvements resulted from more efficient superchargers, designed by Stanley Hooker, and the introduction of aviation spirits with increased octane ratings. Numerous detail changes were made internally and externally to the engine to withstand increased power ratings and to incorporate advances in engineering practices.
[Lovesey 1946, pp. 224-226]


On the subject of Ejector Exhausts: I’m surprised that no one has commented on what today we would probably call a “Value Added” feature of Ejector Exhausts. The following is an extract from the same Wiki article:

The Merlin consumed an enormous volume of air at full power (equivalent to the volume of a single-decker bus per minute), and with the exhaust gases exiting at 1,300 mph (2,100 km/h) it was realised that useful thrust could be gained simply by angling the gases backwards instead of venting sideways.

During tests, 70 pounds-force (310 N; 32 kgf) thrust at 300 miles per hour (480 km/h), or roughly 70 horsepower (52 kW) was obtained which increased the level maximum speed of the Spitfire by 10 mph (16 km/h) to 360 mph (580 km/h). The first versions of the ejector exhausts featured round outlets, while subsequent versions of the system used "fishtail" style outlets which marginally increased thrust and reduced exhaust glare for night flying.

In September 1937 the Spitfire prototype, K5054, was fitted with ejector type exhausts. Later marks of the Spitfire used a variation of this exhaust system fitted with forward-facing intake ducts to distribute hot air out to the wing-mounted guns to prevent freezing and stoppages at high altitudes, replacing an earlier system that used heated air from the engine coolant radiator. The latter system had become ineffective due to improvements to the Merlin itself which allowed higher operating altitudes where air temperatures are lower.[23] Ejector exhausts were also fitted to other Merlin-powered aircraft.
[Price 1982, p. 51]

Hope I haven’t wandered too far OT.

Pete

swiss 12-20-2010 12:07 PM

The FW190 Turbo

http://fw190.hobbyvista.com/fw190v18.htm


http://fw190.hobbyvista.com/v18.jpg

T}{OR 12-20-2010 12:22 PM

Very nice link, thank you for posting.

Please correct me if I am wrong:

Quote:

The strange protuberance on the underside of the aircraft is the Hirth 9-2281 turbocharger. Note the nearly unchanged rear fuselage and canopy.
...but to me, the spiral thing next to the engine looks more like a turbocharger. "The strange protuberance" looks more like an inter-cooler or a radiator. In any case, a heat exchanger.

- - -

EDIT:

Discussion moved to a new thread, here:

http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showthread.php?t=17720

Strictly OT posts were deleted/edited.

Azimech 12-20-2010 12:25 PM

Small remark on the gasses that drive the turbo: the driving force is pressure, not speed. Turbo's work due to a pressure differential with the outside air, while a turbo-compound uses the kinetic energy of the exhaust gasses. That's why the P47's critical altitude is a function of turbocompressor speed (roughly 20K rpm) because due to the lower pressure outside, the turbine was spinning faster, until it's constructional limit was reached (and the pilot warned).

Turbo-compounds use a "blow-down" turbine and as a result do not produce parasitical back pressure on the engine. In theory a blow-down turbine can be added sequentially to a turbocompressor, adding even more efficiency to a system, maybe by driving a generator or coolant pump or as in case of the Wright R-3350 the crankshaft via hydraulic clutches.

Interesting document by Curtiss-Wright Co. on the Wright R-3350 Turbo-Compound:
http://www.enginehistory.org/Wright/TC%20Facts.pdf

Azimech 12-20-2010 12:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by T}{OR (Post 205611)
Very nice link, thank you for posting.

Please correct me if I am wrong:



...but to me, the spiral thing next to the engine looks more like a turbocharger. "The strange protuberance" looks more like an inter-cooler or a radiator. In any case, a heat exchanger.

If you look carefully you'll see thin lines, a pipe, attached the exhaust pipes, running through the fuselage, into that thing behind the intercooler. That's the turbocharger. You'll see a pipe go through the intercooler and from the intercooler back to the engine. It seems they had it right to keep the supercharger attached to the engine, since the turbo takes load of from it, decreasing the load on the engine to drive the supercharger, and being able to boost even more. It was probably even coupled with the barometric device that regulated the variable hydraulic clutch. Anyway I would've chosen that spot due to the CoG.

I wish Flugwerk would build a 190C, just to see how it performs.

T}{OR 12-20-2010 04:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Azimech (Post 205612)
Small remark on the gasses that drive the turbo: the driving force is pressure, not speed. Turbo's work due to a pressure differential with the outside air, while a turbo-compound uses the kinetic energy of the exhaust gasses. That's why the P47's critical altitude is a function of turbocompressor speed (roughly 20K rpm) because due to the lower pressure outside, the turbine was spinning faster, until it's constructional limit was reached (and the pilot warned).

Turbo-compounds use a "blow-down" turbine and as a result do not produce parasitical back pressure on the engine. In theory a blow-down turbine can be added sequentially to a turbocompressor, adding even more efficiency to a system, maybe by driving a generator or coolant pump or as in case of the Wright R-3350 the crankshaft via hydraulic clutches.

Interesting document by Curtiss-Wright Co. on the Wright R-3350 Turbo-Compound:
http://www.enginehistory.org/Wright/TC%20Facts.pdf

Absolutely correct.


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