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S Chassis Technical discussion related to the S Chassis such as the S12, S13, S14, and S15. |
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11-06-2010, 08:10 PM | #1 |
limits of the sr20det side mount intercooler.
Ok before I post the question I completely understand that a front mount intercooler, even an ebay knock-off front mount intercooler set-up would free-up several ponies compared to a fectory s13 silvia side-mount.
With that said the question at hand is at what point does the stock s13 side-mount intercooler begin restricting horsepower from the breathability or the sr20? I never noticed any difference from when I had a stock s13 sr20det at 12psi on the t25 with a fmic in my s14 to what I know have which is another stock s13 sr20det at 12psi on the t25 with the factory side-mount. To be totally honest it feels like I have alot less lag with the side-mount than I did with the fmic. I'm about to upgrade to the oem bolt-on style gt2871r .64 ar on a s13 sr20det which is being rebuilt with forged internals (rebuild is necessary for the engine itself not for the turbo set-up) and was debating on if that would really hold back very many ponies and if it would possibly seem to have less lag since the smic piping is only maybe and inch and a half to two inches I figured it would possibly be able to pressurize the piping and the intercooler faster and decrease on some lag. But the the heat soaking from the turbo would come into play. So the questions is does anyone actually know when the factory smic begins to severly restrict horsepower? |
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11-06-2010, 11:24 PM | #2 |
I actually just got an email back from enthalpy on the subject statign they are only effective to around 200whp. After that they can cause the intake air temps to raise enough to cause detonation.
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11-07-2010, 07:10 PM | #5 |
Zilvia Junkie
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i destroyed my 2nd sr20 using a side mount running 12psi in the summer, the 4th piston was missing some pieces and the rings were melted. im now running a retro fitted srt4 intercooler in a mid mounted setup and its a very noticeable difference even at 7psi. ditch the side mount man
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11-12-2010, 12:29 PM | #6 |
You destroyed engine internals on cyl. #4 with a side mount huh? Well if thats not a reason to put an intercooler in the path of every rock and lug nut flying down the road at greater than 60mph i dont know what is! The honest truth is, if you have a side mount THAT IS DUCTED PROPERLY, of a decent size and not mounted behind your radiator it will function great until you reach a certain boost or hp level. They are very nice for certain power levels. They are typically not huge and due to that have a result of making the turbo spool faster (although nominal). They dont catch road debris which can damage the fins and tubes or plates rendering your intercooler useless. People who run front mounts with no mesh in front of them should be constantly straightening their fins. It gets very easy to loose 30% or more of your fin area very quickly. Pick an intercooler for your boost/power level not because someone said they melted a piston with a stock mount because they were likely not monitoring intake air temps, possibly running the intercooler unducted, and went lean.
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11-13-2010, 07:51 PM | #7 | |
Man w/ CTSV & a Car Seat
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Thats how people blow their fucking engines, hotter, compressed air into the engine, with no fuel tuning = hello detonationville. |
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11-15-2010, 07:15 AM | #8 | |
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11-15-2010, 02:12 PM | #9 | ||
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1) You dont need to go overkill on the intercooler. 2) If you melted an engine because of an intercooler, you did not research your modifications enough. And likely dont understand just how hard you are pushing your engine. If you are unsure you should have monitored your air temps as that would have been a direct indication of the intercoolers efficency at your chosen boost level. Quote:
I'm very familiar with ccp. A stock rotary 13b-rew is 1.3L with combustion events happening 2x that of a 4 stroke engine so we consider it 2.6L. Stock it produces 255 flywheel hp divided by 159 cubic inches equals 1.6 hp per cubic inch! A stock s13 red or black top is 121 cubic inches or 2.0L. In stock trim it produces 202 flywheel hp. (I picked the s13 power number as its what most people run.) Which comes to 1.6 hp per cubic inch! The same as the 13b-rew. That is a lot stock! Especially since the 13b-rew is .6L bigger for this comparison. the 2009 Corvette LS7 ZO6 motor is: hand built by Chev. has: titanium valves and rods 6 bolt main bearing caps dry sump lubrication system and every bit of engineering Chev could throw at it. and it makes 1.18 horsepower per cubic inch! the 2009 Dodge Viper SRT10 makes 1.17 hp per cu inch. both 2 valve motors. 4 valve motors make 27% more hp & torque... more air makes more ponies. the 2009 4 valve Lambo Murcielago ($440K) makes 1.59 hp per cu inch o k let's add more air... enter the 2009 Corvette ZR1 supercharged and approx 40 K more than the ZO6... 1.69 hp per cu inch. how about a 4 valve twin turbo 2009 AMG Merc SL65 AMG? 1.81 hp per cu inch. each of the above mega price/mega hp offerings could have been tuned up for more hp but the manufacturer made a decision as to where to say NO to more power with a consideration to engine reliability. normally aspirated piston engines: it looks like the balance point is around 1.18 hp per cubic inch. forced induction: around 1.75 hp per cu inch. (the 27% differntial between 2 valve and 4 valve is in-operative on force fed motors for obvious reasons.) Now remember what the sr20det is stock. 1.6 hp per cu inch. Pretty close. My FD makes 400rwhp which is 460 crank hp. 460 divided by 159 cu inches (or 2.6 liters) is 2.89hp per cubic inch!!!! For an sr20det to get to that 2.89 hp per cubic inch mark it only needs to get to 349 flywheel hp! That isnt a whole lot of total hp! But that is a ton of hp per cubic inch. That is seriously pushing it on just about any engine. We are talking serious drops in longevity and reliability as a result. That is a truly massive amount of hp per cubic inch with just over 300 hp to the wheels. gasoline, any gasoline including racegas, auto-ignites at a mere 495 F. as we raise hp levels we are moving closer to auto ignition/knock/breaking. alcohol, (methanol, ethanol and isopropyl) ignite at 858 degrees F! If you have an AI system like FJO's and a stand alone ecu, you can actually tune 20% of the fuel out of your maps and replace it with methanol. Which means more advanced ignition timing, more boost and more power! Combustion Chamber Pressure. torque is a direct product of CCP and when related to RPM determines HP. CCP correlates directly to heat. The best way to address the issue of high ccp and heat is with AI. There are many benefits and the systems arent overly expensive or difficult to set up. The benefit of the injectant you choose is based on what kind of latent heat effect you want. The highest latent heat effect comes from water. The only issue is that water is not a fuel. Here is a table of potential injectants and their latent heat effects taken from engineeringtoolbox Engineering ToolBox Product Latent Heat of Evaporation (kJ/kg) (Btu/lb) Acetone 518 223 Alcohol 896 385 Alcohol, ethyl (ethanol) 846 364 Alcohol, methyl (methanol) 1100 473 Alcohol, propyl 779 340 Benzene 390 168 Heptane 318 137 Hexane 365 157 Kerosene 251 108 Propane 428 184 Toluene 351 151 Water 2257 970 Pick what ever intercooler you want but remember that no matter what intercooler you pick you wont be lowering combustion chamber temperatures very much in comparison to AI. Of course we know that the primary deal w lower IATs is more oxygen molecules per volume. And when you are talking oxygen nothing beats alcohol, or methanol specifically. meth is 49% oxygen by weight ethanol is 34% oxygen by weight. gasoline is zero% oxygen And if you are into drifting, how much air do you think is going through the intercooler when your sideways? How much of a difference do you think that would make to AI? When you are pushing your ccp that high a cool air charge from an intercooler just starts to become insufficient. AI is spreading through all of the high performance tuning communities like wild fire. Its probably time that it made a stronger presence in this one too. |
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11-17-2010, 03:19 PM | #11 | |||||||||||||
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REgardless, I wouldn't let that worry EVER deter me from going FMIC. Quote:
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SMIC is fine for a secretary driving to work, not some 18 year old guy beating it up all night. Quote:
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Many companies do produce kits, but even a barebones kit is going to cost you 350-450 dollars to run. On a stock setup you also fight 'tuning' the meth injection to work properly with the power level. Ontop of that, the only way to really control it that cheap is with a Hobbes switch or something..which isn't really failproof or the right way.... 7psi @ 2500 RPM is much different than 7psi @ 5500 rpm...trust me when I say, hobbes activated meth cars suck. Quote:
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The point is it works properly all the time, and provides consistant results. I'll be the first to tell you that I love AI for track days, but it's not something I use all the time on the street as my intercooler works well. Quote:
. . . Take this as humbly as possible Hsitko, but it sounds like you need to step away from some of the engineering books you're taking for class, and spend more time working with it in the realworld with the parts. Trust me when I say, just because it works on paper does not coorelate to the real world at all. There are simple to many factors to consider other than flow rate. 7psi, without beating on it to long.
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11-21-2010, 03:14 PM | #13 |
Just two things. Codyace
First. Methanol is alcohol. Second. Finding any actual pressure drop information on most of the name brand intercoolers is difficult. For some reason its not a stat that they advertise. As for the rest. You have not provided me with any valuable data to back up your claims. Only conjecture and opinion. Thank you for your attempt to change my mind. I value other points of view and opinions. I tried to make a logical case for something based on actual evidence and data. I never stated that a front mount should not be run. Only that you should choose one based on power goals and use. But you took it personal and got emotional. My data is posted. The info speaks for its self. I have no opinion any more. |
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11-21-2010, 04:04 PM | #14 | |
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When I use 'alcohol' I speak about fuel used for cars. It's not methanol that they use in the cars. Is methanol an alcohol? Certainly...but I don't use the terms on that sense. They are not interchangable iterms in most 'car guy' circles, so excuse my lack of technical backing. And lastly, you haven't provided any information yourself. Sure I don't have everything written down on paper, but I do have first hand experience with this stuff, on mulitple platforms and in different forms. So while I may not 'convince' an engineer type, I will be able to say "I told you so" after someone switches with ill results; just because their isn't empirical data presented doesn't mean you should write someones opinion off as nonsense. If I did that to most old heads I wouldn't know what I do today. If a sidemount was 'truly' a better option, you'd see more after market SMIC's, and more support/usage of them. The truth of the matter is that they were designed for an OE application, and an 'everyday' driver in mind. 10-14 psi, with abuse on the street all night or multiple passes in a row, is not what Nissan engineers (probably calsonic or garrett more than likely) built it for. You simply can't combat heatsoak. I don't care if a hole is cutout of the side, with specific ducting...if the cooler itself isn't efficient at transfer it's not going to work. This is why you see HP (really torque) differences when people go from crabby Ebay FMIC's to Quality core FMIC's. So while your calculations on needed processing make sense to you, the reality is your're not taking into account the two biggest things: Efficiency (pressure drop) and heat transfer rate (excuse my lack of technical terms). A stock sidemount is less than ideal in both applications for any member looking to use their car spiritedly. Granted many car modders are often guilty of being 'lemmings', but after 15 yeras of these cars (and other setups) being out there, there is a reason why you see FMIC's on them. Works on paper <> works in application.
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02-08-2011, 12:40 AM | #15 | |
Leaky Injector
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you have to remember: a flame is an extremely complicated chemical system... gas phase chemistry is never as simple and straight forward as you would expect from a cursory knowledge of the chemicals involved... combustion involves reaction of O- radical anions (atomic oxygen, NOT molecular oxygen), R radicals (aliphatic/carbon radicals) H radicals, O2 radicals, R-OO radicals (peroxide radicals, including hydrogen peroxide)... at the end of days, that OH in methanol and other alcohols DOESNT behave like oxygen (molecular)... its function in the overall combustion mechanism is DIFFERENT, and thus its inclusion in the initial fuel has no impact on the combustion process itself. in other words: the fact that methanol molecules include an atom of oxygen has absolutely no relationship with the amount of oxygen fuel (O2 from the air) that is used in the combustion process, nor does it affect the ACTUAL stoichiometry of a REAL flame (which is NOT the same thing as a general chemistry balanced equation of nCH4OH + mO2 -> xCO2 + yH2O). the real stoichiometry of a real flame takes into account the mechanism of the chemical reaction, which the simple grade school thermodynamic representation DOES NOT. |
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01-09-2012, 01:25 AM | #18 |
Zilvia Addict
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English please! The side mount is good for stock 7psi or 11 doesnt matter to me,Codyace is dead straight correct,you cant beat heat soak. even on 95+degree day,That greddy,blitz,godspeed,ebay junk dealing with heat soak better than a smic
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01-09-2012, 01:42 AM | #19 | |
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The intercooler's purpose is to cool air, and thus, make it more dense. In doing so, with most intercoolers, you can expect a -1 to -2 PSI pressure drop, pending on you plumbing and the size of the intercooler.
The size of your intercooler really depends on where you live. People that live close to the equator, or in Death Valley should get a larger intercooler. You want that air to be colder. Up here where I am in Canada, we can get away with smaller intercoolers, because even in the summer, it rarely gets that hot, consistently. ...but, considering the price difference and the minimal Pressure drop, might as well go bigger. but, I can't stress enough what was mentioned earlier on, the bold part is even more important. Quote:
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01-10-2012, 06:48 PM | #20 |
Post Whore!
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Hot air leads to detonation, that is a fact... Side mounts heat soak, and although FMIC's can, it takes an either undersized core, not efficient core, damaged or extreme amounts of abuse to make it happen. There doesn't need to be any data, they work, in real world applications. No one is really going to take into consideration debris when they are beating on their car.
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01-11-2012, 03:27 AM | #21 |
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For you guys who want hard evidence, i have a friend who took some temps measures. That is on a CA18DET, which produces less heat than an SR20, and the intercooler is nearly the same. turbo is a brand new T25, set at 15psi with supporting mods.
on a 15°C day, temp after turbo is 157°C . OEM SMIC, IAT is 55°C after a couple of pulls. It gets worse with every pull. He stopped when hitting 75°C. 208HP torque 29mkg. random ebay FMIC, IAT is 19° after a couple of pulls, and stays there after some more pulls. 222HP torque 31mkg. more torque and power is still there up to redline, while it goes down at 5000rpm on OEM SMIC. Now, try that on a 30°C day and watch your pistons melt. OEM SMIC for S13 and S14, is rubbish. It WILL heat soak, even with a stock engine and no mods, as it is made for a standard driving style. Dont use one if you drive your car hard. ever. that and it gets covered in dirt qui often due to its position and is hard to clean, much harder than any FMIC . A better intercooler, wether it is SMIC or FMIC, gives more power AND more reliability. I think it is the ONLY part that does that. You really should use one. |
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