Author Topic: BV effect on pressure  (Read 7442 times)

Offline wideopen231

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BV effect on pressure
« on: July 16, 2015, 06:37:02 AM »
Spud,
   Question. What causes the pressure to be higher with the  K style BV versus the cube style.Is the pressure claculation on your calculator based on in front of BV? If so I can see why it would effect it.
Been wondering this for while and always looking to learn something new.
Relecting obama is like shooting right foot because it did not hurt enough when you shot left foot

Offline Spud Miller

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #1 on: July 16, 2015, 06:57:23 AM »

 Yes, it is a bit of a mystery and not easy to understand. Every component in the fuel system affects the flow and pressure slightly. Every hose, every fitting, filter, check valve, etc. The placement of such things all has influence, in most cases very slight. The metering valve has a huge effect on this however. Look at the typical Enderle cube for example...the fuel changes direction many times (90 degree corners in most cases). There's a pressure drop at each point in the system and this causes the pressure to differ depending on where you measure it. The fuel flowing through the system has momentum/inertia and when it hits a corner, it's higher on one side of that point and lower on the other. After several such places, it can change quite a bit.

 If you put a pressure sensor before and another after the barrel valve, you'll see a difference, even at WOT. Sometimes as much as 20 PSI or so. Pressure backs up against things, is relieved in certain places (check valves and passages in the BV that lead to check valves), and the spring loaded poppets in the check valves cause a strange situation with pressure at that point and upstream.

 Pressure reported in the calculator isn't always correct, but it should be fairly close for a given metering valve style. Since putting a box in the calculator for pressure correction would just confuse people and cause endless questions and head scratching, I chose to just use correction factors for each that are typical for what we see flowing systems. It's a ballpark idea to help people choose nozzles.

 When we find big discrepancies in pressure, there's generally something causing it that's easy to identify. For example, running a blank pill in an Enderle barrel valve and running a drop-in style pill in a "main" check valve after the pump can cause actual system pressure at the nozzle to be quite a bit different than what we'd calculate. The system still works great...no problems with doing that and the tuneup is basically the same. But pressure is affected.
 
 Spud

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Offline wideopen231

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #2 on: July 16, 2015, 07:20:25 AM »
Thanks Spud,

 I figured the BV had to be a drop. 30 years of air and water flow testing on commercial building systems gives me good in site and always curious.  Drops are reason I always try to run system straight with as few turns as possible. Thats and turbulance.If you see a 90* fitting in my system you know there was no way around it.

 Must have been having brain fart or the path of flow would have answered my question. Cube enters in rear and exits same so 180*.K stly front enter straight to spool then thru when WIDEOPEN.


Any negative to running the K on injected setup? I have both styles. My second injector would require som mods,the enderle hat will work with either.Then second is home brewed using some old enderle parts and the bridgeport,kind of like barn door style.

  Another question. Can I do a dual line deal using my base nozzles total flow at given pressure and going with smaller ones that total the same. Example  running 8-.037's  going with 8-.020 and 8 .031's.  My flow sheets are BASED ON FLOW AT 150 PSI,some stuff from Ralph when I was running blown alky. I have formula or figuring flow rate with pressure change. I normally run new rate for pressure change and compare sizes based off that.  I can see it would add more fittings and some pressure changes.
Don't you hate folks asking for free info.LMAO
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Offline ricardo1967

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #3 on: July 16, 2015, 07:25:15 AM »
Good topic. Just to confirm... so generally speaking, a cube style valve is more restrictive than a K-style valve at WOT?

dreracecar

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #4 on: July 16, 2015, 08:24:12 AM »
I would say that the cube is more restrictive if one is running nitro (in volume) and the straight thru design of the K style is mandated, but running alcohol or gas in the type of cars most of us run ,either K or Cube works and would not get rid of a cube and buy a K expecting any big changes. On my "Cube" went from a 1/2" feed line to the dist block down to a 3/8" line. Still more area in the 3/8"id the the total combined area of the nozzels. To me Alcohol is a sloppy fuel compared to nitro or gas and one can get away with a lot little issues and still run great

Offline ricardo1967

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #5 on: July 16, 2015, 08:55:01 AM »
I would say that the cube is more restrictive if one is running nitro (in volume) and the straight thru design of the K style is mandated, but running alcohol or gas in the type of cars most of us run ,either K or Cube works and would not get rid of a cube and buy a K expecting any big changes. On my "Cube" went from a 1/2" feed line to the dist block down to a 3/8" line. Still more area in the 3/8"id the the total combined area of the nozzels. To me Alcohol is a sloppy fuel compared to nitro or gas and one can get away with a lot little issues and still run great

Thanks Bruce. It makes sense to me.

Offline wideopen231

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #6 on: July 19, 2015, 07:38:11 PM »
Cool I will throw one of the K's laying here on and start with it.I'm not much on super high pressure system,but no reason to add restriction if don't have too and it cost nothing  to avoid. I like to run system around 100# and have jet between 110 and 130 using nozzle sizing to get it in that area.Maybe because I have run them like that for while seems to respond to tuning better for me.
« Last Edit: July 19, 2015, 07:44:20 PM by wideopen231 »
Relecting obama is like shooting right foot because it did not hurt enough when you shot left foot

Offline Paul New

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #7 on: July 19, 2015, 08:02:48 PM »
Example  running 8-.037's  going with 8-.020 and 8 .031's.  My flow sheets are BASED ON FLOW AT 150 PSI,some stuff from Ralph when I was running blown alky. I have formula or figuring flow rate with pressure change.

I would not want to run nozzles that small .020 unless you run a filter...... Still sounds like an easy place to get a plugged nozzle

Offline wideopen231

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #8 on: July 20, 2015, 05:28:19 AM »
always have filter in system.Plus filter fuel twice before it goes into tank. On plugging nozzles .036 is still very small opening.I do pull it down and blow system out and check during week between races. With the way the smaller nozzles are in hat above open plenum if one got plugged it would have little effect on system.Now if two or three get trash yes it becomes issue.It does give big cooling effect to incoming aircharge,which it may do as well with nozzle only at intake flange just have never found away to check air temp in intake port.I have taken readings entering hat and half way down runner. Found as much as 20* differance. Does that make more power?Seems it should,but never been able to do A-B-A testing.
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Offline Spud Miller

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #9 on: July 20, 2015, 06:41:16 AM »

 I was not suggesting that everyone junk their cube metering valves just because they present more restriction than a K-valve.

 A restriction is a problem only if you can't get enough fuel out the other end. If your pump is less than 13 GPM, you're not going to see any difference at all running a cube or a K-valve, regardless of fuel type.

 There's a pressure drop, but the point was there's a drop with almost anything you do. Your motor won't care a bit.

 Spud


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Offline wideopen231

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Re: BV effect on pressure
« Reply #10 on: July 20, 2015, 12:00:54 PM »
Can not speak for everyone. I did not take it that the cube was bad piece,heck its on more injection systems than about anything except maybe hilborn piece.
  I like K style better and was hasitating putting it on NA motor. It have split outlet does help with dual line system I want to run.Allows me easy way to make system switchable and leaning for quick temp gain,plus few other things.

Hey I am tuner at heart and love trying things and learning things.Thats reason for original question.
Relecting obama is like shooting right foot because it did not hurt enough when you shot left foot