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-   -   Friday 2010-12-10 Dev. video update and Discussion (http://forum.fulqrumpublishing.com/showthread.php?t=17629)

Abbeville-Boy 12-14-2010 06:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by T}{OR (Post 204551)

Before this gets more OT I will get back to the subject...

I wonder if the proper firing order has been simulated as well? Judging by the amount of details already shown, I would be surprised if it wasn't.

rumor is that game ships with a timing light and cloth map

Azimech 12-14-2010 06:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by W32Blaster (Post 204494)
Let´s say youll have a Pierburg 4A1 Carburator with ECU for fully closed loop control of a 3-Way Katalyst System and you compare it with a early k-Jet-Tronic, guess which one is more sophisticated in terms of providing right mixture for all operational state.

Ah, I thought we were comparing WW2 carbs with WW2 mechanical injection. Because the Pierburg would probably have a hard time compared with Bosch Motronic, itself already 25 years old. K-Jetronic is very simple indeed.

Richie 12-14-2010 06:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sternjaeger (Post 204465)
erm... no, in a nutshell: mixture has different ratios, which need to be varied according to your altitude (leaner/richer mixture), besides a 50/50 mixture ratio would probably send your valves into orbit ;) (Disclaimer: just wanted to make a joke here, please don't take it literally and start posting copy/paste engineering blabber..)
What Richie said just doesn't make sense: engines won't produce different flames if they're direct injected or carburator injected. Or maybe I got it wrong in the first place.

I don't really explain things very well. I think that fuel injection is a much more precise system than a carbureted engine and much less likely to flame up when being started. In all of the videos I've watched of 109s being started not once have I seen one have a stack fire. That's why I said I thought the Allied pilots will have more fun with the flames and over priming than the Germans will. Does that make sense? Put BF 109 in youtube and watch 109s start.

sorak 12-14-2010 06:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pencon (Post 204538)
I agree with Wildone,next we will be debating on what colour shoelaces the pilots wore.It's been a long enough wait for this sim and if everybody keeps going all Frazier crane on every little detail,Maddox will go broke trying to please all the anal retentives.

Did you forget that Oleg himself requested the community to talk about this subject? Post like yours is the useless ones.

Richie 12-14-2010 07:22 PM

Well it really doesn't really matter if we go over board because he can pick and chose what information he can use and what he likes right?

Luftwaffepilot 12-14-2010 08:18 PM

Hopefully we get some nice christmas special friday update with release date, publisher name, awesome effects video and more. :grin:
I can't wait.

ElAurens 12-14-2010 09:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sternjaeger (Post 204520)
it's a dirty business, hands always covered in grease, oil and cuts, but when you feel 1650HP growling in your guts, swinging that big propeller 10ft in front of you, 12 cylinders furiously roaring in all their power.. well it's well worth the dirty hands ;)

..The truth is that I like physics but I've always been rubbish in maths (I always lose a + or a - somewhere..).. LOL

Never been into an aero engine, but I work on lots of old stuff. Everything from a Model T Ford to E-type Jaguars and a Lotus 11 LeMans.

Actually, driving the very early cars has much in common with early aircraft. The carbs are very rudimentary, as are all the other systems. They require constant input from the operator to be at their peak. Every gross change in throttle setting demands a change in mixture and spark advance, and it all changes as the engine warms. The settings you left the shop with will not be the settings you come back with.

It's a type of driving I really enjoy as it requires actual thought and input.

334th_Gazoo 12-14-2010 10:34 PM

These are my thoughts as a steel fabricator. Using an oxygen acetylene cutting torch as an example... A very rich mixture of gasses coming out of the torch is Orange with much Black smoke. A high oxygen mixture is Blue White.Setting the mixture At the optimal point between an Oxidising flame and Carburizing flame is ideal.

I believe that effciency in an engine may be measured thus, and exhaust coulor be matched accordingly.

Thankyou for your patience

334th_Gazoo

The point is.. Is it running Lean or Rich?

WTE_Galway 12-14-2010 10:46 PM

Carby mixture settings have nothing to do with the stack flames on startup.

Carburetor aircraft engines commonly have a hand priming pump like the one below out of a spitfire:

http://www.spitfirespares.com/spitfi...40%20small.jpg

The pump injects fuel directly into the carb barrel or intake manifolds. Pumping it too many times before cranking the engine results in an excess of fuel and exhaust stack flames can result.

Richie 12-14-2010 10:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 334th_Gazoo (Post 204603)
These are my thoughts as a steel fabricator. Using an oxygen acetylene cutting torch as an example... A very rich mixture of gasses coming out of the torch is Orange with much Black smoke. A high oxygen mixture is Blue White.Setting the mixture At the optimal point between an Oxidising flame and Carburizing flame is ideal.

I believe that effciency in an engine may be measured thus, and exhaust coulor be matched accordingly.

Thankyou for your patience

334th_Gazoo

The point is.. Is it running Lean or Rich?


Right. If you look at all of the engines in the videos...in they dark... they're all blue. By the chart that was put up if the mixture is right and the engine is running perfectly the flame should be blue with a lick of red at the end. If you stood right up close maybe you could see some red.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhFAw...layer_embedded


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs_qt...layer_embedded


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZzvKCQwWj0


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