Author Topic: Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???  (Read 14546 times)

October 12, 2007, 03:36:47 pm

greg123

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 73
    • http://www.small-engine.co.uk
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« on: October 12, 2007, 03:36:47 pm »
For a little project I need a graph of something very simple, cylinder pressure (inside cylinder) vs crank angle through the 4 strokes.  So I can see the pressure at any given point, eg at 90 degrees in the power stroke, at the end of the exhaust stroke etc.

Does anyone have a link to such a resource?  I know it will vary on intake and exhaust restriction/type of engine/diesel or petrol, however I want something that will give me a baseline.

Would appreciate any pointers!

Greg.
Freelance Mechanic specialising in Tdi motors and Veg-oil 2-tank conversions.

Reply #1October 12, 2007, 04:29:37 pm

Mark(The Miser)UK

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1557
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2007, 04:29:37 pm »
It's impossible to determine.
Compression stroke is a bell curve because of non linear relation between piston translation and crank rotation...
Except that it isn't because of the fuel combustion....
[You'd have a slight vaccuum with no fuel injection because of  the heat losses...]
Residual heat at bottom of stroke maintains 10's of psi pressure...
All vary according to individual engine; size; coolant type; thermostat; rpm;load;cam position etc.

I do have a generic picture but it can contain no numbers. Only way is to measure your particular engine at your particular required operating conditions.

I know this is not the answer that you want :cry: but unless a test has been done on your  engine type and close to your setup I can't see a way of providing  data with any meaning. There are formulae for compression stroke...
Mark-The-Miser-UK

"There's nothing like driving past a bonfire and then realising; its my car on fire!"

I'm not here to help... I'm here to Pro-Volke"

Be like meeee: drive a Quantum TD
 ...The best work-horse after the cart...

Reply #2October 13, 2007, 03:14:15 am

greg123

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 73
    • http://www.small-engine.co.uk
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #2 on: October 13, 2007, 03:14:15 am »
I have seen engines at uni with variable compression and a sensor (pressure) installed in the cylinder head.

I'm happy with generic numbers because, for example, there will always be the lowest pressure part way through the induction stroke, highest pressure I'd imagine just after ignition, exhaust stroke starting off high and as the vale opens rapidly reduces and so forth.

Different engines will have variation in numbers but the pattern will be the same, eg you are not going to find one where a vacuum exists during the power stroke and the peak pressure is during induction!!!  They will all follow the same sort of pattern, just as it's possible to point to an engine and guestimate it's EGT's roughly - my lawnmower won't be making 1500 but a race prepped car that has a glowing manifold might!

This rough data must exist somewhere.  Or some sort of software to model it - I have demo engine analyser but I can't see an output to plot cylinder pressure.

Greg.
Freelance Mechanic specialising in Tdi motors and Veg-oil 2-tank conversions.

Reply #3October 13, 2007, 01:30:04 pm

Mark(The Miser)UK

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1557
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #3 on: October 13, 2007, 01:30:04 pm »
just as it's possible to point to an engine and guestimate it's EGT's roughly - my lawnmower won't be making 1500 but a race prepped car that has a glowing manifold might!
Greg

Ha ha

You must have a faulty mower then :shock:

http://www.letsmow.com/faq.asp#q13
Mark-The-Miser-UK

"There's nothing like driving past a bonfire and then realising; its my car on fire!"

I'm not here to help... I'm here to Pro-Volke"

Be like meeee: drive a Quantum TD
 ...The best work-horse after the cart...

Reply #4October 13, 2007, 01:44:33 pm

greg123

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 73
    • http://www.small-engine.co.uk
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #4 on: October 13, 2007, 01:44:33 pm »
Friggin Nora, that's a RACING mower!

I have to push mine....
Freelance Mechanic specialising in Tdi motors and Veg-oil 2-tank conversions.

Reply #5October 13, 2007, 02:47:30 pm

Mark(The Miser)UK

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1557
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #5 on: October 13, 2007, 02:47:30 pm »
Did you see the bit about not removing the 'gov'ner' :shock:
Imagine tinkering with your mower and not telling your neighbour then letting him see you whizz across the lawn :wink:
Mark-The-Miser-UK

"There's nothing like driving past a bonfire and then realising; its my car on fire!"

I'm not here to help... I'm here to Pro-Volke"

Be like meeee: drive a Quantum TD
 ...The best work-horse after the cart...

Reply #6October 13, 2007, 03:20:50 pm

greg123

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 73
    • http://www.small-engine.co.uk
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #6 on: October 13, 2007, 03:20:50 pm »
When I very first started with engines I bought a petrol rotovator/cultivator which wouldn't run.  I had no concept of a crank but did roughly figure there was a piston and a spark plug - this is the level I was at.  After playing with it for a few days and washing the spark plug in the sink... it finally fired up.  With a MASSIVE plume of smoke and started to rev right up.

I had disconnected some bent bits of wire that appeared to be in the way of the throttle, which I assumed was holding it back for some reason.  The noise the thing made and the smoke I ran for it, watching from a distance as about 15 seconds after it started there was a large bang and then it wound down very smoothly like an electric motor.

After stripping the engine and learning that it had snapped what I learned was called the con rod and later relating this to over-revving from the disconnected govener, I have to this day been unhappy revving engines - particularly if it's near their design limit ;-)
Freelance Mechanic specialising in Tdi motors and Veg-oil 2-tank conversions.

Reply #7October 13, 2007, 07:36:52 pm

subsonic

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1836
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #7 on: October 13, 2007, 07:36:52 pm »
Mower racing is big in Maine.  Friends son in law put a 1100cc ninja motor into his riding mower.  Open class.  Freaking nut's.  What the hell would the obit say?  Joe blow was killed Sunday afternoon in a high speed roll over while riding his Sears lawnmower.  EST speed was 75mph.???
2009 Jetta TDI Loyal edition, 6-spd. 16V 2.0CR


1985 VW Golf 5-spd, 4-door, 1.6NA  Bought from orig. owner in Savannah with 42,000 miles.
"Making the jump NA to TD" slow but sure.

1980 VW Rabbit LS 5-spd, 4-door 1.6NA almost 450,000miles  RIP

Reply #8October 14, 2007, 04:18:43 pm

bigblockchev

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 271
cylinder pressures
« Reply #8 on: October 14, 2007, 04:18:43 pm »
Large diesel engines are sometimes tested with a cylinder "indicator" which if memory serves is exactly what you describe a graph of cylinder pressure versus crank angle. do a search for indicator diagram and you will find related stuff such as http://www.hnsa.org/doc/fleetsub/diesel/chap9.htm maybe not exactly what you are seeking but close in any case. Cheers Dan
it's always something simple
one test is worth a thousand guesses
95 Chev Suburban 6.5 w performance mods
91 Mercedes 300D 603.960 6cyl 3L
87 Mercedes 190D 2.5 Turbo
2000 Jetta TDI
76 Onan  MDJF 15Kw genset
5.5 years and counting on B100

Reply #9October 15, 2007, 02:37:39 am

greg123

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 73
    • http://www.small-engine.co.uk
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #9 on: October 15, 2007, 02:37:39 am »
That's the kind of thing I'm looking for!  I will search more for that and hopeuflly stumble on a full graph.

Cheers!
Freelance Mechanic specialising in Tdi motors and Veg-oil 2-tank conversions.

Reply #10October 16, 2007, 09:20:25 am

xud9te

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 88
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #10 on: October 16, 2007, 09:20:25 am »
Hows this?

Its a 4 cyl, 4 stroke, 1.4 litre petrol (k-series)


Reply #11October 16, 2007, 03:26:38 pm

Mark(The Miser)UK

  • Veteran

  • Offline
  • ***

  • 1557
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #11 on: October 16, 2007, 03:26:38 pm »
That graph doesn't look real.
The start of combustion doesn't show. Is it an average of lots of cycles?
Mark-The-Miser-UK

"There's nothing like driving past a bonfire and then realising; its my car on fire!"

I'm not here to help... I'm here to Pro-Volke"

Be like meeee: drive a Quantum TD
 ...The best work-horse after the cart...

Reply #12October 17, 2007, 12:19:48 am

greg123

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 73
    • http://www.small-engine.co.uk
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #12 on: October 17, 2007, 12:19:48 am »
xud9te, thanks for that.  It exactly like what I want, however I have been head scratching to try and work it out.  I don't see the compression rise and I can't see the 'vacuum' (below atmo) one would typically expect in part of the induction cycle - the graph is 4 cycles long but much of it shows an almost constant pressure, other than the spike.

Do you have any more info on this graph?
Freelance Mechanic specialising in Tdi motors and Veg-oil 2-tank conversions.

Reply #13October 17, 2007, 01:12:09 am

OM617

  • Guest
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #13 on: October 17, 2007, 01:12:09 am »

Reply #14October 17, 2007, 08:35:52 am

xud9te

  • Junior

  • Offline
  • **

  • 88
Graph of cylinder pressure vs crank angle, where???
« Reply #14 on: October 17, 2007, 08:35:52 am »
Mr the Miser:

It was real when I recorded it last week!  :P

It is an average of 500 cycles, yes, so there is some smoothing.  We take SOC from the spark and mass fraction burned.

Greg:

Maybe the P-V diagram will help you better?



Cheers
greg