Although the white smoke looks at the trumpets like air condensation too !
I found it as a download download it with flashget (worked for me)
mms://vipeurosport.yacast.net/eurosport/2004/07/01/F1_Renault_16871_4_25_0_320x240.wmv
There is also a resonance that occurs due to the length of the intake trumpets, because of the pressure wave that occurs when the valve closes. And if it's timed properly by matching the length of the intake trumpet (using flow velocity, s.o.s, etc) with the frequency of pulses from the valve closing (rpm dependent, but usually where peak torque occurs) then a resonance can occur that will feed air into the combustion chamber. That's one of the ways they increase the volumetric efficiency on a naturally-aspirated engine.Seriously, they squirt in mid air. The variable length trumpets you see on that pic from Scarbs are in the position of highest rpm - they go upwards, closer to injectors when the engine is on lower rpm, when the vacuum is high and when the engine needs torque and elasticity. On high rpm the trumpets need to be as short as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Here is my collection of Engine images
The piston and the rod is from a ferrari 2001 i think (grabbed from f1atlas forums) And the lower 3 pics is from an asiatech engine
http://www.geocities.com/djgr84/collage.jpg