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not in line i was thinking as a y adding air to what the engine already pulls
if you "Y'd" it in, any boost you MIGHT make would be lost thru the inlet.
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not in line i was thinking as a y adding air to what the engine already pulls
I didn't ask you to build me one. I just stated that I wished someone would build one. But if you would like, you could design one on paper including what you use to build it with, how you would install it in a Ranger and please feel free to include any technical drawings and mathmatical formulas that you require. Drawing one out on paper wouldn't cost you a cent and I would really like to see your design.except for you can easily calculate the effects of an electric supercharger. the fuel line magnets and tornado...not so much.
im not going to go build one for you because i dont have the money or resources to waste on something like this. but the fact that it appears to be possible, even practical on paper would suggest that its even remotely possible in the "real world".
I'm not arguing with your math, because yes it is pretty easy to figure out how much CFM you need to obtain a certain horsepower. I also never said that I didn't like it because it's unconventional. I can pretty much say that I like to think outside the box most of the time. All I asked is that someone build one, post the proof that it works and not argue that it looks good on paper, you have to prove it.calculating the CFM an engine uses, and the horsepower requirements to produce that CFM is pretty simple math, theres not much room for error to occure. other than the fact that you dont like it because is unconventional, you have no reason to think it wouldnt work if the mathmatics support it.
ive got math to support my arguement that it could work. what have you got to counter my arguement with? "its never been done"? good point. in june of 1969, noone had walked on the surface of the moon....im sure your "its never happened, so it CANT happen" attitute would have convinced NASA to just give up.
Do you know how much power it would take to power some kind of DC motor to make it work.
First off the motor woudl weigh 10-20 times what a turbocharger weighs.
Second it will take 5-10 times the amount of room that a turbo takes up
Third it would take additional altenators and a bed full of batterys to power the unit.
A turbocharger can spin up to 70,000+ rpms
A turbo uses no additional fuel when out of boost...the motor acts like a motor without the turbo meaning your milage will not change
blowers rob a few HP from the crank and rob very little milage due to the parasitic drag
a electronic blower setup would cost you alot of fuel economy considering you would be carrying around another thousand lbs to make it work not t omention the additional altenators creating more drag on the crank
HERE is a 1hp DC motor. it weighs 38lbs....which takes less than 2 HP to move down the 1/4 mile. how much does all your extra exhaust tubing on your tubo weigh? probably not as much as the motor, but my point is that the difference in weight isnt as much as you think.