Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

You know what the funny thing is about the writing in bold. That's exactly what it is. Because it's only one part of the engine that's different to the rest. And you want to total it into some aggregated displacement? When total displacement figures assume that displacement is equally shared amongst chambers?

Even if I'm wrong about my averaging, your totalling assumes that the 4 litre is evenly divided amongst combustion chambers...it's not the case. If one chamber has different displacement to the rest then you need to state so...and only for that cycle will it be a 1.4 litre engine...for the other cycles it will be a 1.3 litre engine. This is such a bad hypothetical example anyway, because balanced engines don't work this way.

I don't understand how you think that compressing air in 2 different ways is so similar that it's comparable? What's your point? For my argument the key words are "different ways". How many spark plugs there are does mean something. If you have 0 spark plugs in an engine it won't run, if you have 3 spark plugs in only 3 chambers of a 6 cylinder engine, it will run as a 3 cylinder engine. If you have spark plugs in all cylinders, it will run as a 6 cylinder engine. How can you say that number of spark plugs and where they are located does not affect it? Nothing wrong with looking at these finer details mate, this is afterall, how an engine works...it's not a simple machine, they are complex.

So I suppose my 2.5L engine should change what it is advertised as depending on what point the pistons are at? Well if that's the case, it will NEVER be 2.5L

Total displacement doesn't assume anything. It's how much air moves through the engine in total. That's what total means.

Again, not assuming anything. If an engine moves 4L of air, then it's a 4L engine. Why would i have to state if one chamber had different displacement? What if I didn't know, WHAT IF I JUST WANTED TO ASSUME MY CUSTOMERS ALREADY KNEW THIS??? I though that's what you were all about... assumptions. I still honestly believe your idea of a 'cycle' is inherrently flawed. A cycle can involve a smaller cycle, but for a true cycle, it should not differ from the previous, or the next cycle, which yours does. My cycle incorporates your 3 cycles that you mentioned. So while I've done one cycle, and could do a billion more that are EXACTLY THE SAME, you've done 3, all of which are different. That's hardly a cycle.

For simplicities sake, I was focussing on one chamber. As long as it has one, it could have 5 more and make little to no difference. Again, just talking about a single chamber... stay with me.

And to be honest, these are pretty simple machines. Whatever screen you're looking at RIGHT NOW is a much more complicated machine then these engines.

here is a better example

you can keep your 1.3 Rotor

we will change all Piston engines to the following

2 Stroke 2 litre = 1 litre

4 stroke 2 litre = 0.5 litres

6 stroke 2 litre = 0.3 litres

you see piston engines per cyclinder uses less than a rotor......!

Incorrect. That would be:

2 stroke 2 litre = 2L

4 stroke 2 litre = 1L

6 stroke 2 litre = 0.67L

Nah you've lost me already mate, you've gone off on some sort of tangent I can't fathom...when did I ever say Mazda assumed their customers knew stuff? I'm pretty sure like most manufacturers, if anything they assume their customers don't know shit. But they don't write the figures down for all those customers, they write them down for the customers who do know.

Engine? Simple machine? Go and invent an internal combustion engine that doesn't use pistons and see how far you get mate. You guys are wagering your logic against some of the best engineers in the world...nice.

I apologise I missed the part of your example where all 100 chambers had spark plugs in all of them...so if they are hypothetically igniting at the same time then yes it's a 130L engine. Remember, I said if hypothetically a 13B rotary could ignite all chambers at once then what would you call the engine? 3.9 litres or 11.7 litres?

Tell me, and here's stretching the limits of hypothetical...but if a rotor had 1000 faces and just as many chambers but only spark plugs in one of those chambers...would it be a 1300 litre engine or a 1.3 litre? Pretty horrible performance for a 1300 litre engine LOL, given it can only ignite ONE CHAMBER AT A TIME.

That's fantastic, your example has actually further proved my point that a rotary only has a valid 1.3 litres of combustible displacement and it's own cycle.

Yes, but it ignites that chamber 1000 times per cycle. so 1300L it is!

Which I didn't take into account on my 130L rotary aircraft engine hypothesis :cool: so that would be like... carry the one... 13 000Ls

big engines... I f**ked up.

Hey birds, just one more thing before the weekend...

If you were to do a compression test on a rotary, how many degrees would you turn the E shaft? If it's only got 2 ignition chambers it should only need 360 degrees yeah? That's 1 cycle yeah?? Cause a compression test only requires one cycle of the engine, any more and you're repeating yourself... and we all hate that right?

:cool:

If you were to do a compression test on a rotary

I'm half-expecting the response to be, "You can't do compression tests on rotaries because they're so different. They don't compress air, they rotarise it."

I'm half-expecting the response to be, "You can't do compression tests on rotaries because they're so different. They don't compress air, they rotarise it."

I dead set near wet myself reading that LOL

Hey birds, just one more thing before the weekend...

If you were to do a compression test on a rotary, how many degrees would you turn the E shaft? If it's only got 2 ignition chambers it should only need 360 degrees yeah? That's 1 cycle yeah?? Cause a compression test only requires one cycle of the engine, any more and you're repeating yourself... and we all hate that right?

:P

And my last post before my weekend celebrations...damn Sydneyites getting Monday off...

Dry or wet test? :)

I don't know how to compression test a rotary but I assume it is done via the spark plug recess where compression is at its peak...in which case you would need to turn the eccentric shaft 3 times for a total of 1080 degrees because due to there only being one combustion chamber in the rotor housing, you can only measure the compression of each rotor face using this chamber. Therefore each face of the rotor must face this one combustion chamber at some point. Were it a 3.9 litre engine I'm sure you could check compression from each individual chamber via each chamber's spark plug recess :)

Or is that two turns of the eccentric shaft...because this would be enough to check all apex seals using only two faces of the rotor, as is a unique ability of this engine? :)

It's never going to end mate; for every answer you guys throw towards us we have something to answer it back and vice versa. And the truth is, everyone to an extent is making valid points here...which is why this argument has continued on for so long. Believe what you guys want, I'm sticking with my theories about this engine and I'll respectfully agree to disagree with you on the basis that everyone here has demonstrated a nice in-depth analysis on the workings of these engines...without coming to universally agreeable conclusions. I myself am pretty happy to have come this far given I have no formal training/education in mechanics or physics and 5 years ago I couldn't point you to a throttle body to save myself (though I did know internal combustion from an early age - thank you nerdy computer games).

Hey birds, just one more thing before the weekend...

If you were to do a compression test on a rotary, how many degrees would you turn the E shaft? If it's only got 2 ignition chambers it should only need 360 degrees yeah? That's 1 cycle yeah?? Cause a compression test only requires one cycle of the engine, any more and you're repeating yourself... and we all hate that right?

:P

1080 degrees as there are 6 pulses to measure. We all know that. I see what you did there. :)

Nice points with your combustion chamber comments Birds :)

IT WAS MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

I was severely drunk and I thought a V8 supercar driver's opinion could be valuable to the discussion. Dean Canto's response: NFI

Sorry guys it seemed like a good idea at the time LOL.

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

    • So, version 4 intake is on its way I was looking at these a while ago but at around $200 or more it was a little pricey for something that might not work, but, I had it in my watch list, but, I got a message saying it was on special, and I had a code thingie to use, it eventually came in at $120 delivered, so BAM, BUY NOW.....LOL I'll need to have a look when it arrives but I feel it will "look" better than what I currently have, as it comes with a PCV fitting, so I will be able to get rid of the alloy pipe that goes to the throttle body with the PCV fitting  Well, that's what the voices in my head are telling me  Oh, and this happened today Yeap, it was a Trojan, and it was cheap, so I headed back to the hardware store and actually spent a little bit more on a heavy duty,  one that was actually recommended by a plumber mate, a Cyclone one with a fibreglass handle that is actually rated for clay The broken shovel will eventually be "modified" into a short handle shovel
    • When you pulled it off, there is no signs of blown head gasket? Is it possible you have some other issues going on? Possible cracked blocked? Or do you think it's straight up lifting the head? Did you check what the head was torqued to before pulling it down (To see if possibly they're stretching, or starting to break threads out etc)?
    • Seems like a decent result for a modded JZX110. They are bulky in comparison to the 100 and 90 models (which I'd prefer myself) but they are getting very few and far between here in JP these days. Thanks for the detailed review and the import process into the UK. I also have a car which I'm hoping to export from Japan at some stage so it's good to know if someone from the UK was interested in it. By the way the corrosion underneath is par for the course for cars which were located in/near the mountains or along the Japan sea coastline. They get huge amounts of snow every winter and the sodium chloride is used on the roads. Many cars have some kind of rubber like treatment underneath but they tend to limit it to the wheel arches underbody and fuel tank. Suspension arms and sub-frames will have similar corrosion to your JZX110 which is a common sight. See it all the time and car dealers here generally don't even mention it unless asked.
    • If the sound goes away when you clutch in, the 1.5/2 way diffs are just shit, and you are a normal person. The diff is likely "fine" but driving at anything under 30kmh is a violent horrible experience. It would be exaggerated with solid diff bushings and subframe bushings if you have those.
×
×
  • Create New...