Don - I've followed the progress of your car for some time now and really enjoy seeing all the updates. Keep it up!
Couple of questions - do you know roughly how much fuel (in pounds per hour) is going in the motor at max power? Reason I ask is on my methanol powered Mustang the total flow is higher than the calculated horsepower would suggest - this alone doesn't surprise me as Top Alcohol cars run much more than needed for cooling and detonation suppression - but just how much more was a shock.
I've found the same as you - every time you think the motor wants less alcohol it almost always wants more...
Also I would love to see what your intake port temps are. When I checked mine a year or so ago I found that 185 degrees in the plenum turned into 90 degrees in the runner (after the fuel nozzles).
A friend of mine with a 460 NA was reading 34 degrees in the intake runner at the end of a run....
Most blower guys seem to shoot for about 140 and feel you can in fact be too cool. I suspect it's to help vaporize the huge fuel volume which makes me wonder what is happening on yours with the nitrous flowing? And would it be more beneficial to feed the nitrous pre turbo?
Hi Dave. So glad you're enjoying the writeup.
The only intake temperature measurement I'm taking is at the up pipe. This is before any fuel is mixed. I am using a liquid intercooler, so keep that in mind. The water in the intercooler is not being circulated during the run. Though I do have a small tank and a pump, at this point I'm not circulating. The IAT is 89.6 degrees F at the start of the run and ends up at 159.8 F at the end.
The amount of fuel is:
160 lb/hr injectors at 85% duty cycle = 136 lb/hr per cylinder.
80 lb/hr per cylinder from the constant flow mechanical injection nozzles.
1,296 lb/hr at the top end for all cylinder?
Plus another 43 lb/hr per cylinder from the nitrous nozzles when the nitrous system is being activated.
The reason I went with port injection was because I wanted to be absolutely sure I had equal distribution. A newbie trying not to blow his motor up. Another reason was that I saw the chance to use the burst of nitrous gas to better atomize the alcohol fuel directly in the runner. The nitrous nozzles I designed shoot the nitrous spray right through a fan spray of alcohol.
If I do install a 2nd stage of nitrous, it will be injected dry, before the compressor. This 2nd stage will be activated as the first stage comes off at 16 psi. The HP rating of the 2nd stage will be smaller than the first stage.
The present port injected nitrous is working exactly as I had hoped it would. It hits with a soft ramp up of power, and when it shuts down, the turbo takes over in a fashion that makes it practically impossible to tell when the nitrous has turned off. Even when I study the datalogs, the only way I can tell when the nitrous has shut down is by the actual MAP number. I know when I see 194 kPa, the nitrous has been switched off. The rpm and map trace lines are rock steady. It's amazing. A seamless transfer of power. As it stands, I have no reason to change it in anyway.
I'll keep updating as more information comes to me. This weekend there's 3 day of racing at my local track, I should be able to get a bunch of testing in.