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#6
Re: industrial plugs for the A series
D
Posted on: 2019/10/21 13:33
Mazdas tech still uses sparkplugs at certain rpm
Nissans engine is a joke in complexity far removed from the A series personally one of my old time fave engines is the Buick "nailhead" v8 it produced 1lbs of torque per cubic inch at low rpm, no direct injection, no complicated circuitry or things that will be hard to replace. Mechanically almost all is possible without Ecus its just it sells better and the agenda is to make us all just use autonomous vehicles in time and be surrounded by a smart grid where we cannot decide a thing for ourselves. I recall old Honda crx s1 getting 45-50mpg with simple efi and the early 1.3 1973/74 civics doing the same with carbs. Using a big factory heavy flywheel my old 2cv engine could idle around 300-500rpm and take off well enough not to need stop start technology and gave me 60mpg. I believe these spark plugs, along with nailhead style chambers, smaller valves, accompanied cams with more lift and duration and a hefty custom flywheel and some thermal coatings for more efficiency, teflon coated pistons skirts, su carb and 90mm stroker crank would make an A15 a happy economy grunter engine to challenge many modern ones in most departments. (Maybe a catalyc converter could also help)
#5
Re: industrial plugs for the A series
ddgonzal
Posted on: 2019/10/21 10:21
true, true. They thought of all this stuff decades ago but now have the technology to actually make it run good and warranty it. The new Nissan variable-compression engine is for sale now in USA. Nissan KR engine. Mazda SkyActiv-X is still a dream ...
The days of 7- and 8- liter cars is over, the 2019 Chevrolet is downsized to a 6.2-liter engine
#4
Re: industrial plugs for the A series
dvr1000
Posted on: 2019/10/21 8:25
Mazda is doing it a different way. From what I understand they run similar high compression ratios and very lean mixtures but inject a second short rich mixture, shot at the spark plug to initiate the ignition process.
There are some clever engineers out there doing things with the combustion engine that weren't even thought of a couple of decades ago. The days of big cubes for big power are over.
#3
Re: industrial plugs for the A series
D
Posted on: 2019/10/18 14:35
yep the passive pre chamber design but now to find some to suit jp engines!
Pre chamber tech prob goes back to ww2 and maybe further back. The thing is F1 has been using it for quite some time running 17:1 and for quite some time obviously pre chamber style plugs have been kept away from mass produced cars or the gains from current super thin nasty piston rings, direct injection and other complex technologies would be poor selling points when an A series 30 years ago could get the same economy as a hybrid today yet with swirly port heads. Today the same A series with passive pre chamber plugs, piston and engine heat and friction coatings would ruin many newer engine figures. If an LS can pass emissions then the venerable A series would easily too if developed further. TBH for at least 20 years I wondered why manufactures didnt use pre chamber designs on their gasoline heads like Mercedes Benz has now on their new engine which supposedly is 50% efficient followed by Toyota`s 41% which are both great efforts however if you saw the Benz tech its so complicated its scary when just some sparkplugs could do the same.
#2
Re: industrial plugs for the A series
ddgonzal
Posted on: 2019/10/18 8:01
The video talks about two kinds of spark plugs:
* Cold Spark Plug for industrial engines with highly corrosive fuels at extreme presssures * Passive Pre-chamber Spark Plug for extremely lean gasoline mixtures The first is not applicable to the A-series unless you're running some home-made experimental fuel! The second looks very similar to the Mitsubishi MCA Jet or to the Nissan NVCC. Very old (and proven) technology for increased fuel economy. Interesting to hear that F1 is using it now, never heard of it in relation to performance before. Look up Chrysler Lean Burn
#1
industrial plugs for the A series
D
Posted on: 2019/10/18 5:33
always thought pre chambers were the way to go for more efficiency
as long as they didnt lower the compression ratio and whattayaknow Formula 1 has been using them and not filtering this technology they stole from long time well proven industrial dinosaur usage. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R453ONkb0_A https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzJaWqhvHf8 question now is which industrial passive pre chamber spark plugs can we use on our daily street driven cars??? You can view topic.
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