That's called 'shedloads of grip'hurril wrote:The merc engines seem to be more responsive in the low to midrange area. They always leave curves with a very fine-tuned power onset. None of the others seem to have this the same way.
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That's called 'shedloads of grip'hurril wrote:The merc engines seem to be more responsive in the low to midrange area. They always leave curves with a very fine-tuned power onset. None of the others seem to have this the same way.
I don't doubt that they do but if you listen to the engine it seems to have instant power in a way that the others don't.PhillipM wrote:That's called 'shedloads of grip'hurril wrote:The merc engines seem to be more responsive in the low to midrange area. They always leave curves with a very fine-tuned power onset. None of the others seem to have this the same way.
godlameroso wrote:Maybe their oil control rings are designed to purposely let some oil in the chamber. Burning oil is an easy way to lower octane, which would let you run a little leaner. I've seen plenty of cars with engines that burn oil be otherwise strong engines with healthy compression and good power.(Case in point the Porsche GT3 burns a healthy amount of oil, some up to a liter every 2,000km(FRM cylinder liners))Facts Only wrote:The question for me is not why does the Mercedes PU emit a puff of smoke but why dont the other engines. I'd love to K is how they have sealed the area in questionME4ME wrote:
Paddy Low has explained this before. Some oil escapes initially before all seals start fuctioning properly.
http://www.6speedonline.com/forums/997/ ... g-oil.html
Maybe the coatings they're using don't hone properly but do wonders for friction and the ability to run leaner is an after thought. It could just be their PCV system has a generous vaccum, but that doesn't make sense they could just as easily use an air oil separator if they were trying to control oil entering the chamber. I think they're allowing some on purpose, but not sure why exactly.
If it is seals leaking why would you want your pneumatic valve spring seals to leak?
The turbine seal, also.PlatinumZealot wrote:Other than the piston rings. Could be behind the compressor wheel. Thats the only place where there is a direct liquid behind a hard seal.
Wouldn't you just use an air oil separator in your catch tank then if you didn't want oil in the intakes?gruntguru wrote:I would assume the crankcase operates at a fairly low (below atmospheric) pressure to reduce windage and oil consumption. There is probably a delay after startup before the scavenge pumps are able to reduce the crankcase pressure sufficiently to eliminate the oil consumption.
Oil drain issues are more common with journal bearing turbos, since they depend on oil pressure, so naturally oil will enter faster than it leaves the housing, and you'd tune your scavenge pumps accordingly. Since they're using a long shaft, would it make sense to use journal lubrication or roller bearings?NL_Fer wrote:The Mercedes Turbocharger is different to the others. They bearings must be very special supporting the long shaft. Also i was in Spa and noticed during test takeoff the turbo starts spinning quicker than the engine revs up, must be the MGU-H doing its magic.
Maybe an instant moment of vacuum in the exhaust manifolds, as the turbo spins and the engine lags behind?
Nothing to do with catch tank and intakes.godlameroso wrote:Wouldn't you just use an air oil separator in your catch tank then if you didn't want oil in the intakes?gruntguru wrote:I would assume the crankcase operates at a fairly low (below atmospheric) pressure to reduce windage and oil consumption. There is probably a delay after startup before the scavenge pumps are able to reduce the crankcase pressure sufficiently to eliminate the oil consumption.