I'm trying to improve my basic understanding of cam timing and cylinder pressure (BMEP?) and I'm having a bit of difficulty getting my mind wrapped around it. I know that steam engines rely in part on a predictable rate of steam expansion. I'm curious whether an air/fuel mixture has a predictable expansion rate which could be explained in simple terms.
I'm sure that the mix ratio, effective compression ratio, temperature, humidity and other variables have an impact, but is there a baseline principle which can be applied to predict how much "volume X" of a mixture of "y ratio" will expand/displace when ignited, and how fast?
My application is the cam timing, ignition timing and intake manifold volume of a v-twin four-cycle engine (basic 45-degree Harley layout).
Thanks in advance for any tips,
Bob
I'm sure that the mix ratio, effective compression ratio, temperature, humidity and other variables have an impact, but is there a baseline principle which can be applied to predict how much "volume X" of a mixture of "y ratio" will expand/displace when ignited, and how fast?
My application is the cam timing, ignition timing and intake manifold volume of a v-twin four-cycle engine (basic 45-degree Harley layout).
Thanks in advance for any tips,
Bob