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A two stroke diesel has a camshaft and a exhaust valve
^^^
True enough. They are 2 strokes in the sence that they have a compression cycle every revolution of the crankshaft. But they still used the conventional cam and valves not piston port/reeds like the 2 stoke gassers that alot of us are acustomed to. So, just like any other 4 stroke, the detroits turbo/supercharger wouldnt be pushing all its boost out the exhaust. Not that it would really matter anyways, because the fuel isnt injected until a few degree before TDC when the exh valve is long closed!
My opinion is that Turbos are superior.
BUT......... Superchargers most certainly will work on 2-strokes, and can work very well. Detroit deisel built many thousands of 2 cycle supercharged deisel engines. some even had turbos feeding into the supercharger!
The drawback, as mensioned above, is that a SC 2 stroke will suffer from alot of lost charge blowing out the pipe when transfer ports and exhaust ports are open at the same time. the key to making it work is to completely modify the port timing to work with the new boosted configuration. this really makes it next to imposisble for joe average to fit a SC to a sled in any cost effective manor , so in the end a turbo is a more practical AND efficient setup.
Barrett
Well the one underlying thing that everyone seems to have missed is that the concept of a supercharger and turbo is the same. Compress a larger volume of air/fuel mixture into the cylinder to create a larger fire to turn the crank harder. So how the he!! does a turbo do that differently than a supercharger?
A two stroke pipe works off of pressure waves being reflected up and down it creating a pressure charging effect on the engine in a given rpm range. Both a supercharger and a turbo are going to blow a certain amount of mixture directly through the cylinder and out the pipe. A properly worked out pipe will shove it back into the cylinder.
As for a turbo only using wasted energy, disconnect your charge tube, reset ur box numbers to stock and ride the sled. Tell me it doesnt cost any horse power then.
Dont get me wrong here I love turbo sleds. I am simply bringing the other side of the argument. I am an engineer and engine tuner; I happen to believe either system could work quite well
You have alot to learn man.
I tried it. Custom billet jugs, Motec fuel injection we did up ourselves..yadda yadda.
It worked OK. Then we ran out of time and money. Wouldn't mind trying it again if I was independently wealthy and had another sled to ride for 3 years while I got the supercharger figured out.
You're sorta correct in the "free energy" thing though. Extra backpressure in a 4-stroke is NOT free energy but in a 2-stroke its alot closer because its also solving a problem you need to artificially create with a supercharger.
Well the one underlying thing that everyone seems to have missed is that the concept of a supercharger and turbo is the same. Compress a larger volume of air/fuel mixture into the cylinder to create a larger fire to turn the crank harder. So how the he!! does a turbo do that differently than a supercharger?
A two stroke pipe works off of pressure waves being reflected up and down it creating a pressure charging effect on the engine in a given rpm range. Both a supercharger and a turbo are going to blow a certain amount of mixture directly through the cylinder and out the pipe. A properly worked out pipe will shove it back into the cylinder.
As for a turbo only using wasted energy, disconnect your charge tube, reset ur box numbers to stock and ride the sled. Tell me it doesnt cost any horse power then.
Dont get me wrong here I love turbo sleds. I am simply bringing the other side of the argument. I am an engineer and engine tuner; I happen to believe either system could work quite well
You have alot to learn man.
I tried it. Custom billet jugs, Motec fuel injection we did up ourselves..yadda yadda.
It worked OK. Then we ran out of time and money. Wouldn't mind trying it again if I was independently wealthy and had another sled to ride for 3 years while I got the supercharger figured out.
You're sorta correct in the "free energy" thing though. Extra backpressure in a 4-stroke is NOT free energy but in a 2-stroke its alot closer because its also solving a problem you need to artificially create with a supercharger.
And exactly what do you think is going to happen to the pipe pressure when you take an exhaust designed to have an 800cc naturally aspirated engine breathing through it and then pressurize that same engine to 15 pounds? If you think the motor needs more backpressure, which im not convinced of, its damn well gunna have it now.
Im not saying its going to just bolt on and work. Im saying that it can work. Im saying that i am probably going to play with it. I appreciate anyone who has any information that they would like to add. Im riding ski doo's at the moment. If they were injected I would just turbo it and be done. To make a carburated sled work correctly you need more linear boost. It cant be so load related or the sled will run, then not run, then burn down. It seems to me that if a supercharger was WORKED OUT (not bolted on and expected to work perfect) it would provide linear boost and be possible to keep in tune.
Im probably wrong. Im sure that you guys will tell me im wrong, so thank you for your overwelming concern
Cheers
here is another hint.
mean exhaust pressure needs to be 2.5 to 4 psi HIGHER then intake pressure.