It's the mass of conductive material.
It has more mass and surface area overall. kilogram for kilogram the above would still hold.
Meh, replace "cold" and "warm" with ambient. Doesn't change my post.basti313 wrote:How can the water be cooler than the radiator in the sidepod?mrluke wrote:The benefit of air to water is that you can use a smaller "charge cooler" as it is being cooled by cold water with a high SHC rather than warm air.
I somehow get the impression, that some people think the water cooling or heatpipe cooling is like a perpetual motion machine...I put a water cooler/heatpipe on a bottle of beer and what I get is ice cold beer...
But you stated, that cold water gives you a smaller charge cooler than warm air. How can this point be still valid if we have water and air at ambient temperature?mrluke wrote:Meh, replace "cold" and "warm" with ambient. Doesn't change my post.basti313 wrote:How can the water be cooler than the radiator in the sidepod?mrluke wrote:The benefit of air to water is that you can use a smaller "charge cooler" as it is being cooled by cold water with a high SHC rather than warm air.
I somehow get the impression, that some people think the water cooling or heatpipe cooling is like a perpetual motion machine...I put a water cooler/heatpipe on a bottle of beer and what I get is ice cold beer...
The only benefit I can think of the water solution is that you do not have to run the charge lines through the car. But this would be still necessary with a mixture of both solutions. I do not know if there is such a solution anywhere in practice.atanatizante wrote:Could they build a mixture of both intercoolers in order to get the best from both?
No. The heat capacity always only goes into the Prandtl number http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prandtl_numberatanatizante wrote: Someone said here that one of the biggest factor in rad/intercooler efficiency (if not the biggest) is how big the specific heat value of an element/component is
It is the other way round. Adding salt/alcohol to water decreases the specific heat as it destroys hydrogen bonds and, thus reduces the thermal conductivity.atanatizante wrote: Now it`s a known fact that if we are adding 3% of ordinary salt for cooking (NaCl) into 1 litre of pure water the result is the boiling point increase to 103 grade Celsius, hence the specific heat value is increasing?
Yeah, you could say now that the greater quantity of salt the greater boiling point would be but in practice the drawback is that you also increase the viscosity of the fluid …
There is no need to store the heat in water as there is no time for cooling it away.atanatizante wrote: So how about a mix intercooler with a traditional air-to-air intercooler but also has integrated in their metal walls micro or nanotubes with salty water which is running in a small and locally circuit
No. its because the water has a much higher shc so can absorb more temperature from a smaller exchange area.basti313 wrote: But you stated, that cold water gives you a smaller charge cooler than warm air. How can this point be still valid if we have water and air at ambient temperature?
Can it be, that you are still thinking about temperature peaks in the intercooling? I think they just not happen, in Malaysia the engine is 85% on throttle, 60% full throttle...Monza even 70% full throttle. There are no peaks, no time for cooling. The water stays at one temperature and the air to air cooler also stays at the same temperature if it has the same size at the cold side.
I'm fairly sure it's down between the fuel tank. There's no need to put it in the sidepod like Lotus because the compressor is at the front already.ringo wrote:http://www.autobild.de/ir_img/1/1/6/6/6 ... 90d826.jpg
http://img3.auto-motor-und-sport.de/Mer ... 769432.jpg
hmm i'm not seeing where a water intercooler would would be in this case..
There doesn't seem to be any room for one, if we look on where the air intakes split around the air filter.
Looking at the images the intercooler looks to be on the bottom pic by the shape of the cooler pipe entry on top.ringo wrote:Here we see Mclaren with their intercooler on the left hand side of the car.
http://img4.auto-motor-und-sport.de/McL ... 769268.jpg
I think the black pipe on top is the charge air pipe.
The right hand side only has one heat exchanger.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BimJqCQCIAAOGtG.jpg:large
I guess the weight of the air in the intercooller wont make the car too unbalanced laterally.