Sorry I forgot to distinguish between the two parts. Not two turbos, but the two parts and the side that utilizes the single crystal blade.
Sorry I forgot to distinguish between the two parts. Not two turbos, but the two parts and the side that utilizes the single crystal blade.
That makes no sense at all.
Additionally, I'd be really surprised if they are using a nickel based superalloy single crystal blade cast in the turbocharger. 1) Single crystal is expensive vs other methods, 2) the exhaust temperatures simply don't justify the single crystal material (the first stages of a gas turbine are well over 2,300F), 3) there are other materials which are lighter and more appropriate for the application. This technology has been around since the 60's, it's hardly a secret.Mudflap wrote: ↑27 Jun 2019, 10:36That makes no sense at all.
There's no nice way of saying this (sorry mods) but you really have no clue what you are talking about so I'm not surprised you misread the entire article.
This is meant to be a technical forum, you can't really make a point if you can't distinguish between major turbocharger components.
If anything, I believe the aero division (this is a Honda/GE joint venture btw, GE having the largest market share of aviation turbine engines in the world) is providing inputs on the airfoil shapes of the turbine and compressor. The aero industry has really excelled here in the last 10 years, especially now that additive manufacturing is being used.bigblue wrote: ↑27 Jun 2019, 19:14I think everyone is reading way too much into this aero-division stuff, in terms of the characteristics of the new turbo. I think simply the F1 team had quite a few hard to solve problems in this area, the aero-engine team has applicable expertise, they helped significantly, and it's about crediting them for their help publicly. It's also about publicising that Honda has some diverse and cool operations and it's really nice when they collaborate cross-division to sort something out. Nothing to do with hinting that it's a turbo for high altitude with single crystal blades a la aero-engine, blah blah blah.
I think the expertise of a gas turbine manufacturer in aerodynamic (rotating domain CFD) and thermodynamic design of rotating machinery is unparalleled in other industries. I dare say that the mechanical aspects are trivial by comparison.