matt21 wrote:AJI wrote:wuzak wrote:
How about just deleting that rule?
Well, my first draft was "5.1.9, deleted", but I figured it needed context...
Seriously though, I think I'm on to something here.
The only thing I can think of you were on to, are exhausts on both sides of the head which makes only sense if you´re using more than one turbine. And in the case of a V-engine it makes absolutely no sense, as the intake would become a mess.
Okay, perhaps I should explain my thoughts a little more thoroughly.
Yes, a single turbine hit directly from the ports inside the V is where I see some of the benefits. The PU designers are currently using complex and large exhaust headers to get to the turbine with an enormous amount of insulation to retain heat. V exhaust deletes most of the plumbing and retains the heat.
I don't really see a major problem with intake. Is it really that much more messy than the current exhaust setup? Sure, there would have to be 2 plenums and perhaps the variable intake could get difficult, but the air intake, the compressor inlet and outlet and the IC would all be the same. The IC outlet would just have to go to either side of the bank instead of up to the top of the current very tall plenum. It's probably the same amount of plumbing?
I can see real thermal management benefits in a 'V exhaust/outside intake' design, as well as lowering the overall weight of the PU and lowering the centre of gravity.
Re: The top inline picture. All they have done is add the complexity of a twin turbo V engine setup to an in-line engine with the added difficulty of cramming an intake port in between the cams. I like a lateral approach, but that is truly demented. Was that the same designer that came up with the H16?