johnny comelately wrote: ↑20 Nov 2022, 00:05
Mmmmmaybe.
They wouldnt be idling at 4K RPM if it was true Miller. These RPM are a consequence of VT.
I am highly skeptical of Millerising, it is often a normal consequence of timing anyway.
Valve timing is valve timing is what works on the dyno. The cylinder fill has to satisfy the below.
One has to work backwards:
The pre ignition pressure is paramount and is determined by the fuel properties firstly and it has to be congruent with the SAHCCI very fine requirements and has to be point on through all transition.
This brings up the question how do they get a rev range and achieve the high efficiency? Beginning with cylinder cut 2 then 3 etc; then variable lambda (a la diesel)
Luckily with the eturbo they can produce the pressure required for their target and to suit this incredible lambda.
I agree re valve relief possibly impeding combustion and therefore efficiency but in the subsequent images they have been introduced and blended beautifully.
Again thanks to e36jon for these insightful images, if only these aero chaps would get interested in the very thing that gives them ....aero!
No one has discussed the discolour yet...next subject I hope.
"The oxidation of the Al(111) surface at 850K (575C) under clean, ultrahigh vacuum conditions produces a sapphire blue coloration of the surface. The blue color is observable for oxygen exposures in the range 400L to 3200L. XPS, ELS and LEED measurements indicate that a crystalline aluminum oxide forms on Al(111) upon initial exposure to oxygen and then subsequently grows as islands on the surface. The Al(2p) core level binding energy measured by XPS combined with previously reported soft-x-ray absorption measurements of the Al(2p) core level-conduction band energy separation suggests that the blue color arises from an optically excited electron transfer between the aluminum metal Fermi energy and the aluminum oxide conduction band."