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#1
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 02:36:53 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote:
If this were true, there would be no need for a choke on a carbed engine. Huh? What does choking an engine (limiting the air in the fuel mixture for a quicker start) have to do with hot plugs? Just curious. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 |
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#2
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I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue
of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I agree with your contention that mechanical clearances in the engine are designed around a certain operating temperature. If the engine is operating above or below the design temperature, thermal expansion rates of the materials in the engine will result in clearances that are different than the design criteria. Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 02:36:53 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote: If this were true, there would be no need for a choke on a carbed engine. Huh? What does choking an engine (limiting the air in the fuel mixture for a quicker start) have to do with hot plugs? Just curious. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 |
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#3
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 02:01:22 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote:
I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I can agree with that. However, combustion has to be initiated by the spark. The fact that a cylinder is operating at certain temperature only assures that the fuel/air mix on entering the chamber is fairly evenly dispursed. The source of ignition is still the spark. A hotter spark means that more energy is imparted to the explosive mixture resulting in a cleaner burn with more energy transfer. The gas expansion rate is better because the burn is initiated quicker. Additionally, a hotter plug in a cold normally aspirated engine means that one can use less choke on starting. Faster start, faster warm up. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 |
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#4
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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 02:01:22 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote: I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I can agree with that. However, combustion has to be initiated by the spark. The fact that a cylinder is operating at certain temperature only assures that the fuel/air mix on entering the chamber is fairly evenly dispursed. The source of ignition is still the spark. A hotter spark means that more energy is imparted to the explosive mixture resulting in a cleaner burn with more energy transfer. The gas expansion rate is better because the burn is initiated quicker. Additionally, a hotter plug in a cold normally aspirated engine means that one can use less choke on starting. Faster start, faster warm up. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 Wrong! A hotter plug only keeps you from fouling at the temperature you are running. No hotter spark. Same coil and ignition driving the EMF. Same gap normally. A hotter plug, just does not transfer as much heat in the same time as cold plug. The heat is transferred to the head and cooling system. If you are running a cold engine, the burn is not as complete and with a normal heat range plug, it would foul and not fire. The hotter range plug just allows the carbon to burn off. Ideal would be a ceramic engine, that allows you run real high temps with out melting the piston, etc. Could get even more energy out of the gallon of gas. When starting, all the plugs are cold. More gas as the volatility of the fuel, does not allow as much vapor to ignite, so more fuel == more vapor. Why you get lots of carbon (black smoke) out the tail pipe on an engine with a stuck choke. |
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#5
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This is true. As you noted, the heat carried away by the cooling system does no
work. If it were economically feasible, using materials such as ceramics, to run higher combustion chamber temperatures, efficiency would indeed increase. Calif Bill wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 02:01:22 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote: I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I can agree with that. However, combustion has to be initiated by the spark. The fact that a cylinder is operating at certain temperature only assures that the fuel/air mix on entering the chamber is fairly evenly dispursed. The source of ignition is still the spark. A hotter spark means that more energy is imparted to the explosive mixture resulting in a cleaner burn with more energy transfer. The gas expansion rate is better because the burn is initiated quicker. Additionally, a hotter plug in a cold normally aspirated engine means that one can use less choke on starting. Faster start, faster warm up. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 Wrong! A hotter plug only keeps you from fouling at the temperature you are running. No hotter spark. Same coil and ignition driving the EMF. Same gap normally. A hotter plug, just does not transfer as much heat in the same time as cold plug. The heat is transferred to the head and cooling system. If you are running a cold engine, the burn is not as complete and with a normal heat range plug, it would foul and not fire. The hotter range plug just allows the carbon to burn off. Ideal would be a ceramic engine, that allows you run real high temps with out melting the piston, etc. Could get even more energy out of the gallon of gas. When starting, all the plugs are cold. More gas as the volatility of the fuel, does not allow as much vapor to ignite, so more fuel == more vapor. Why you get lots of carbon (black smoke) out the tail pipe on an engine with a stuck choke. |
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#6
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 04:34:41 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote:
This is true. As you noted, the heat carried away by the cooling system does no work. If it were economically feasible, using materials such as ceramics, to run higher combustion chamber temperatures, efficiency would indeed increase. I made an assumption that I shouldn't have based on anecdotal experience with my two antique Internationals. Learn something new everyday. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 |
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#7
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 03:48:02 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 02:01:22 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote: I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I can agree with that. However, combustion has to be initiated by the spark. The fact that a cylinder is operating at certain temperature only assures that the fuel/air mix on entering the chamber is fairly evenly dispursed. The source of ignition is still the spark. A hotter spark means that more energy is imparted to the explosive mixture resulting in a cleaner burn with more energy transfer. The gas expansion rate is better because the burn is initiated quicker. Additionally, a hotter plug in a cold normally aspirated engine means that one can use less choke on starting. Faster start, faster warm up. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 Wrong! A hotter plug only keeps you from fouling at the temperature you are running. No hotter spark. Same coil and ignition driving the EMF. Same gap normally. A hotter plug, just does not transfer as much heat in the same time as cold plug. The heat is transferred to the head and cooling system. If you are running a cold engine, the burn is not as complete and with a normal heat range plug, it would foul and not fire. The hotter range plug just allows the carbon to burn off. Ideal would be a ceramic engine, that allows you run real high temps with out melting the piston, etc. Could get even more energy out of the gallon of gas. When starting, all the plugs are cold. More gas as the volatility of the fuel, does not allow as much vapor to ignite, so more fuel == more vapor. Why you get lots of carbon (black smoke) out the tail pipe on an engine with a stuck choke. Ah - well then apparently I was operating under a misunderstanding then. Although my anecdotal experience led me to believe otherwise. Hey, can't know every thing right? Thanks for the lesson everybody - learn (or in this case relearn) something everyday. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 |
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#8
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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 03:48:02 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 02:01:22 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote: I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I can agree with that. However, combustion has to be initiated by the spark. The fact that a cylinder is operating at certain temperature only assures that the fuel/air mix on entering the chamber is fairly evenly dispursed. The source of ignition is still the spark. A hotter spark means that more energy is imparted to the explosive mixture resulting in a cleaner burn with more energy transfer. The gas expansion rate is better because the burn is initiated quicker. Additionally, a hotter plug in a cold normally aspirated engine means that one can use less choke on starting. Faster start, faster warm up. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 Wrong! A hotter plug only keeps you from fouling at the temperature you are running. No hotter spark. Same coil and ignition driving the EMF. Same gap normally. A hotter plug, just does not transfer as much heat in the same time as cold plug. The heat is transferred to the head and cooling system. If you are running a cold engine, the burn is not as complete and with a normal heat range plug, it would foul and not fire. The hotter range plug just allows the carbon to burn off. Ideal would be a ceramic engine, that allows you run real high temps with out melting the piston, etc. Could get even more energy out of the gallon of gas. When starting, all the plugs are cold. More gas as the volatility of the fuel, does not allow as much vapor to ignite, so more fuel == more vapor. Why you get lots of carbon (black smoke) out the tail pipe on an engine with a stuck choke. Ah - well then apparently I was operating under a misunderstanding then. Although my anecdotal experience led me to believe otherwise. Hey, can't know every thing right? Thanks for the lesson everybody - learn (or in this case relearn) something everyday. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 And if you run a really hot plug, the plug can burn up under heavy load. Used to race cars and used a hot plug when working on the car in the garage. got to the track late once (more than once) and left the garage plugs in the motor. Ran good in practice for about 10 minutes, then started missing. When I pulled the plugs the center electrodes were mostly gone. Bill |
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#9
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But the heat range of the plug is only a function of the heat transfer rate of
the insulator. Hotter plugs have a longer path from the tip to the metal body which transfers the heat to the head. So the tip of a hotter plug wood maintain a higher temperature. However, any plug capable of igniting combustion will create the same reaction in the combustion chamber and deliver the same amount of power. A hotter plug may have less of a tendency to foul if this is a problem. Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 02:01:22 GMT, Jim Kelly wrote: I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. I can agree with that. However, combustion has to be initiated by the spark. The fact that a cylinder is operating at certain temperature only assures that the fuel/air mix on entering the chamber is fairly evenly dispursed. The source of ignition is still the spark. A hotter spark means that more energy is imparted to the explosive mixture resulting in a cleaner burn with more energy transfer. The gas expansion rate is better because the burn is initiated quicker. Additionally, a hotter plug in a cold normally aspirated engine means that one can use less choke on starting. Faster start, faster warm up. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- Basic Fishing Program: 10 - Fish 20 - Eat 30 - Sleep 40 - Goto 10 |
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#10
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"Jim Kelly" wrote in message ... I am questioning your assertion that "combustion is strictly the pervue of how hot the spark is." I contend that that it is necessary to increase the fuel to air ratio on a cold engine because the engine is not imparting enough heat to the mix to create a combustible mix regardless of the heat range of the plug. Therefore, engine temperature has a direct effect on combustion. You have the right idea. The spark delivered to the combustion chamber is the same regadless of the plugs heat range. The only way to get a hotter spark is if you use a hotter coil. And using a hotter plug than the manufacturer recommends is can damage the engine. You will always need a richer mixture in a cold engine, the fuel doesn't atomize as well when cold. I installed an aftermarket programable fuel injection in my truck. It takes 30-40% more fuel for cold starts. Rich |
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