FinnHammer
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Mike,
Yes, when I say "blow" I mean flow in the direction the engine produces during normal operation. I was myself puzzeled by the difference, but am happy I made the comparison, because lazy me wanted to avoid having to reconfigure bench from suck to blow, but now I understand I have to. I have no idea how this difference in flow vs. direction can happen. I think you are right about how you apply the pressure differential across the port, either way should be fine. I had the opportunity to compare my orifice plates to the flow through a Helgesen plate manufactured by a toolmaker guy with a lot of experience , and my gear tracks his within 2.5%, I may correct my plates ratings to match his exactly. I calculated the diameters of my orifices using an Excell spreadsheet, and in this sheet there is a factor called "discharge coefficient" you can set it to whatever you want and this will change the size of the orifice. I set it to 0.62, others have used down to 0.58. Anyway, the resulting orifices show remarkable accuracy, and certainly good to go for comparing progress in the porting process. When we try to compare from your bench to mine, that is when the problems arise, because none of them are presicely spot on. I really have no idea which port bias to go for, I am shooting for what the valve size/port efficiency dictates. Basically, I will take what I can get.
As promised, here are the curves taken this morning, comparing 15" to 28". I am satisfied that the 1.366 conversion factor between 15" and 28" has been demonstrated. The port pretty much obstructs any further increase in flow from 0.25" valve lift, and up, but this ought to change when I start to open up the port.
Cheers, Finn Hammer
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