Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Perhaps with a methanol mix, that is right. Obviously the meth combusts, which would skew the results vs using only water. I'm not going to contradict the observed experiences of guys who have used/tuned with it.

Two different approaches altogether, and would require you to use either one (100% water), or the other (water/alcohol mix) and stick with it religiously.

A friend of mine having his rally car tuned last week found that the AFR leaned off from 11.8 to 12.9 using 100% water.

  • Replies 55
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

To the original topic of the thread.

If I was going down the upgrade path again, I would probably look for a good quality SMIC to control pressure drop at higher boost, and avoid having to cut bar work to make a FMIC fit.

Then I'd also include a water/meth kit.

Overall cost would probably end up in the same bracket as using a good FMIC, but the results of the water/meth kit superior.

The question would be can you live with checking/filling the reservoir on a regular basis?

Edited by Dale FZ1

Yeh when ours was tuned they had to lean out the afrs a little....but then screw in heaps more timing and a few pounds extra of boost and watch the power climb with no increase in knock.

cool. as soon as i get my new alcon setup happening il be going down that path. seeps pretty good bang for buck.

also i would think thered be a slight reduction in turbo lag too. is this tru. cos of more stuffs going into the engine?

question for you guys: how long are your actuation paths for the water/meth kits?

I am probably going to install a decent kit on my vehicle eventually, but the reserviour would need to be in the boot of the car due to space constraints under the bonnet. would 2-3m of piping be okay? do they have check valves?

Stocky,

If you check out a couple of the links above there's a bloke with a kit behind his back seat. So I'd assume its all fine running a setup so far away. You can get check valves for them. Not sure if the kit includes it.

haha neill we run our tank right at the very back of the car in the driver side quarter panel/boot...no problems with ours. Its small quarter inch line with a high pressure pump...there is virtually no pressure loss over the few metre distance it covers, if your suspect about it just get the upgraded pump to the 220psi model.

Ive heard of some bloke who set his injection up two way...one feed before the throttle body as per standard and then he hooked up another one in his intake which was hooked up to a boostline from the plenum so it helped atomise the mix better and it cooled the compressor/intake air before it was cooled by the i/c and then even moreso when it reached the valve inlet. Supposedly it increased the hp rating of the compressor by another 100-200hp as it was cooling the intake charge right at the turbo inlet so its efficiency range could increase without blowing hot air...thats how it was explained to me anyway...ive never seen it myself....but i wouldnt mind trying it.

yeh more then likely. But extra timing adds a bit of power. If your knock is a little high at that level then it will come in handy just for reducing knock.

Edited by r33_racer

I am thinking of just buying a 100psi pump, a proper spray nozzle and using the signal from the stock boost solenoid to activate the water injection at 4500rpm via the use of a relay.

Anyone have any thoughts on this idea? I know it gives limited scope for tuning abilities, but it would reduce some of heat generated at higher boost levels.

I have a kit imported from the US. Works well however you need to tune around it. If you do not have access to a wideband then you are tuning blindly.

Btw water's effect on AFR is negliable and that is a fact.

I have a kit imported from the US. Works well however you need to tune around it. If you do not have access to a wideband then you are tuning blindly.

Btw water's effect on AFR is negliable and that is a fact.

Total agreement about the need to use wideband to tune.

Regards the effect on AFR, can I refer you to my earlier post about the impact on my mate's rally car during tuning? Going from 11.8 to 12.9 is quite significant. Note: that particular system used only water injection - no intercooler.

When tuning "around" the water injection, did you play mostly with fuel, or ignition?

cheers

Edited by Dale FZ1

well the kit we use states that you need to lean out the mixtures by around 10% i think it says from memory. Apart from the kit, our tuner also stated that he had to lean it out as it was too rich and flat spotting if he didnt.

water/methanol kits are as old as the hills and they don't cost a fortune to make yourself if you have the time and can be bothered.

You 'can' remove the air to air intercooler if you are drag racing and just the injection kit but, you might also like to switch instead to a water/air intercooler.

Tuning wise you end up with an interesting mix of changes depending on whether you used the kit to nab more boost, timing or leaner AFR or the usual combination. From memory (although someone correct me if I am wrong) the 'ping' threshold is lower with the water injection effectively acting better on hot spots in the combustion chamber as opposed to an air temp drop of equivalent magnitude (waters specific heat value is rock & roll compared to the gas components in air). I vaguely remember conversation (alcohol and years of brain damage) with drag racers years ago at the old ravenswood drag strip about humidity and it's effects on the tune for supercharged engines.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Nah. Was just wondering if you were having a small stroke or if there was some slur/gaf/inside joke that I wasn't aware of.
    • That was a fark up, it's Salamanca Place I was thinking of. And now I'm curious as to what potential slur/gaf I have caused with Salamander Road, ha ha!
    • Actually everyone on the roads was really well behaved. The only person that did any minor tailgating was a local hoon in a Turbo Focus. Unfortunately we weren't going the same way so there was no grand initial D touge battle. Lots of people pulled over and let me through. The amount of "Hey man nice car, omg skyline, nice 34 man woo" was suprising. Like really suprising. Like almost annoying. My partner was obviously surprised, she'd never seen anyone in the real world point out the car/like the car/want to chat about the car before, so to have like 3 people per day mention it was notable, I could finally say SEE? SOMEONE THINKS THEY'RE COOL. Everyone was also pretty suprised about the weather. Every day was dry and about ~13-14C. Mount Wellington had a sign that said they close the gates at 9pm and I was heading up there at about ~7:30. It was VERY apparent that conditions were getting significantly worse by the minute on the way up and down. The road on the mountain was terrible though, it's no driving road. I have various suspension related questions now. Luckily it was only about 20 minutes from where we were staying to the top of the mountain as said Google maps. We only had the 2 nights in Hobart. We went to the Farm Gate Market though which was really good - And went down to the Hastings Thermal springs/caves down there during the day. I'd definitely be up for going back again, so luckily there's a few more sights yet to see. Didn't get to do the west coast/queenstown/cradle mountain so this was supposed to be a 'scouting' trip anyway of sorts if I were to one day do/take part in/organize a more car-focused trip. As for the boat, it wasn't bad. Well it was bad, but not in the way you're thinking. We did the night trip which leaves at 6:45 (though you have to be there ~2 hours earlier) and arrives the next morning at about 6am. There is nothing to do on the ship. If you plan accordingly and bring a book/tablet/show to watch/charger you can just chill out, take some Travacalm and just sleep through it. The food there is an extremely basic buffet that costs $32 a plate, or $14 for a $3 pizza. The way back we had a travel kettle and a few different types of cup noodles and made our own tea/coffee in the room. This was a far superior way to do it. At the very least book one of the rooms with beds. I guess as we were in the off season we didn't have room mates. You get an option for rooms with 4 beds (2x bunks) or a room with just the two bottom beds. There's also some option for a deluxe queen bed but it's much pricer. We've been on sleeper trains in Asia before so we figured this is similar (and it was)
    • You just gotta be really, really, really clear and decisive with what you want your end product to be. 99% of people who want this conversion aren't "I want to run a 295 front tyre!" so they don't really need the widebody. They just want the OEM body to look a little less dumpy, so bonnet, bar, skirts job done with some camber, stretch, slam. It's when you want that, but then decide to pivot later you get big problems. See also if you're willing to get an all in one fibreglass bar, and you're willing to accept fibreglass problems like cracking the entire item on a driveway, instead of just a piece attached to the bottom, etc etc etc. Decide this all before buyin'.
×
×
  • Create New...