Actually, the head is an original from a 1.6 TD, just rebuilt. :-)I lowered the compression ratio in order to reduce the peak cylinder pressure. The crack between the valves in the head on one of my other 1.6 TDs cracked all the way into the water jacket (the engine was stock all its life). As far as I know, all these heads do this, it is just a question of time. My guess is that the lower peak cylinder pressure will slow the crack propagation.Yes, I could add an intercooler, however that would be a major undertaking. Besides, there is no really good place to mount it. Putting it in front of the radiator would reduce the effectiveness of the radiator...While an intercooler would reduce the boost pressure, it would also throw away heat that I would rather have go into the cylinder. (An engine is just a device to convert heat into energy on the shaft, the higher the peak temperature, the better it works.)The fueling rate screw is turned in far enough that the collar is against the locknut, and the heat rejection rate of the engine is enough to overload the cooling system on a warm day. Being in a racecar the engine spends almost all of its non-idling time at wide-open throttle. My suspicion is that the engine is not far from maxxed out.I think I will get more bang for my buck to take the 1.6 out of the racecar, and install a TDI instead. Then, install the 1.6 in a street-use vehicle (putting the compression ratio back to stock, and lowering the fueling rate to something reasonable).
your engine is far from maxed out its basically stock with slightly increased fueling and lots of boost. u haven't even upgraded theintake manifold
i had almost 140hp at crank from a 1.6d with k24,intercooler and added fuel.just that, so you are very far from maxxed out.
Trust me, I am an engineer :-)
Quote from: carrizog60 on December 13, 2012, 02:20:38 pmi had almost 140hp at crank from a 1.6d with k24,intercooler and added fuel.just that, so you are very far from maxxed out.How did you measure HP at the crank on a dyno?
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
engine dynos are common. You can bolt an engine to it and measure it right from the crank.
That's a big job to pull an engine to put on a dyno, unless it was freshly rebuilt. I wonder why carrizog60 reported the estimated crank hp rather than wheel hp when it was done on a wheel dyno?ps. I had my 92 Eco on a dyno a month ago and the TQ at the wheel was 103 ft lbs @ 2800 rpm and 62 HP @ 3300 RPM. Everything stock except governor mod.
ps. I had my 92 Eco on a dyno a month ago and the TQ at the wheel was 103 ft lbs @ 2800 rpm and 62 HP @ 3300 RPM. Everything stock except governor mod.
Quote from: 92EcoDiesel Jetta on December 14, 2012, 08:17:48 am I wonder why carrizog60 reported the estimated crank hp rather than wheel hp when it was done on a wheel dyno?In Europe that is how they normally do things
I wonder why carrizog60 reported the estimated crank hp rather than wheel hp when it was done on a wheel dyno?