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crazycuda wrote:exhaust is a burnt gas aka no liquid

cboggs wrote:crazycuda wrote:exhaust is a burnt gas aka no liquid
Isn't water a by product of the combustion cycle?
so wouldn't that mean that there is some "liquid" in the exhaust flow?
Curtis


panic wrote:"it will have less volume and/or mass vrs the intake"
???
MUST have the same mass. Conservation of matter law.
Volume is larger, since there are no droplets present and temperature is easily 1000 degrees higher.

crazycuda wrote:panic wrote:"it will have less volume and/or mass vrs the intake"
???
MUST have the same mass. Conservation of matter law.
Volume is larger, since there are no droplets present and temperature is easily 1000 degrees higher.
Panic , let me make sure i understand you correctly, your saying the exhaust volume is larger since it is a burnt heated gas not a liquid.
if that is true then everything i learned is wrong and and all exhaust ports are way to small
cboggs, im sorry for not including water in the burnt mixture. I was using the refrence as a burnt gas not a liquid vapor mix like the incoming a/f charge.

On another note, I am not sold on the theory that the flow in the exhaust port goes Sonic. Anyone here care to prove this theory?

This report has some hints of some very useful info but I have not found how to access the referenced "illustrations" Perhaps they are available only to members. ---- anyone know how to access these ?
http://members.eaa.org/home/flight_reports/epg4.html
Larry


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