If we assume the engine produces 800 hp.hr of energy over race distance* while consuming 4 kg of oil, you get average oil consumption of 5 g/hp.hr.
(* Based on 800 hp @ 100 kg/hr and 100 kg total fuel consumption per race)
If we assume the engine produces 800 hp.hr of energy over race distance* while consuming 4 kg of oil, you get average oil consumption of 5 g/hp.hr.
Very wise words.manolis wrote: ↑01 May 2017, 07:32Then go to http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/forum/sh ... 58&page=98 and read the last sentence of the last post of that discussion.
10% better than 37.5% - is that 47.5% or 41.25%?Muniix wrote: ↑29 Apr 2017, 18:46Deceptive again, modern diesels are nealy 10% higher in efficiency, automotive diesels would also be at least 10% better at the same bore and stroke giving the same surface volume ratio where heat is lost.manolis wrote: ↑28 Apr 2017, 08:57The design is old (more than 80 year old).
The 37.5% BTE is maintained in a wide range of revs (from 1,500 to 2,500).
The 37.5% is not the peak BTE of the engine.
The fuel efficient, lightweight and reliable Junkers Jumo Diesels enabled, for the first time, airplanes to travel at distances not possible before.
So,
either Heywood is not right, or the rest characteristics of the Opposed Piston Jumo 205 are by far superior than those of the state-of-the-art modern Diesels (wherein the flame initiates centrally, wherein the fuel is injected at way higher pressures (fine droplets) and with the perfect timing, wherein everything is optimized by computers, etc, etc) to justify the 37.5% “working” BTE .
The 2T Jumo was robust, too - Ju 86 P/R high-altitude recon-bombers - used a brace of 'em,gruntguru wrote: ↑01 May 2017, 10:1410% better than 37.5% - is that 47.5% or 41.25%?Muniix wrote: ↑29 Apr 2017, 18:46Deceptive again, modern diesels are nealy 10% higher in efficiency, automotive diesels would also be at least 10% better at the same bore and stroke giving the same surface volume ratio where heat is lost.manolis wrote: ↑28 Apr 2017, 08:57The design is old (more than 80 year old).
The 37.5% BTE is maintained in a wide range of revs (from 1,500 to 2,500).
The 37.5% is not the peak BTE of the engine.
The fuel efficient, lightweight and reliable Junkers Jumo Diesels enabled, for the first time, airplanes to travel at distances not possible before.
So,
either Heywood is not right, or the rest characteristics of the Opposed Piston Jumo 205 are by far superior than those of the state-of-the-art modern Diesels (wherein the flame initiates centrally, wherein the fuel is injected at way higher pressures (fine droplets) and with the perfect timing, wherein everything is optimized by computers, etc, etc) to justify the 37.5% “working” BTE .
For a 1.6 litre per piston engine, 37.5%+ TE over a wide operating range is remarkable. For an engine built 80 years ago it is absolutely astonishing!
I have spent some time on the dynamometer with a modern (12 y.o.) 6 litre, 6 cylinder, common-rail, turbo diesel. That engine has a peak TE of 38%. Convert the Jumo 205 to turbo-charging and the peak TE would push 40%.
& how much has the current Honda F1 engine program cost - per race win T-C?Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑01 May 2017, 12:57the Hercules did a worse job than the Merlin at twice the cost
the Sabre cost more than twice the Hercules
why do we think that our car engines cost can be doubled again because doing this looks good under testbed conditions ?
when the diesel air pollution scandal that Europe has inflicted on itself shows that testbed results are lies
Suppose you have a cylinder with bore b and stroke s and a single piston.gruntguru wrote: ↑01 May 2017, 07:10No - a cylinder head that leaks no oil. Think about it and see your mistake before critiquing the engineering abilities of others.Mudflap wrote: ↑29 Apr 2017, 01:19A cylinder head that leaks oil, yes.I am sure this is not a deliberate attempt to mislead and you simply overlooked the fact that the extra piston contributes its own displacement, so oil consumption as a function of engine displacement remains the same were you to substitute the opposing piston with a cylinder head.
"I will stop here..."Mudflap wrote: ↑01 May 2017, 23:56Suppose you have a cylinder with bore b and stroke s and a single piston.
You have another engine with 2 cylinders, same bore b and half the stroke.
The 2 cylinder engine has 2 times more rings and implicitly 2 times more ring gap area and 2 times more groove vertical clearance area.
Which engine has a higher oil consumption and higher ring pack friction ?