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shawn wrote:Larry?, Darin?, thought one of you would have some brilliant insight into this for us!
Shawn

The " Discharge Coefficient " is the measure of how efficient a given area is in regards to mass flow verses area, divided by a theoretical maximum. I use the 146 cfm/SQin and not the 137 cfm/SQin that the SAE dictated years ago just because that's what all my data has been accumulated with from day one.
Window Area = Valve diameter * Pi * lift
window area * 146 = theoretical maximum flow for that area
Take your flow and divide it by your theoretical maximum. This is the ratio of effective flow area to actual flow area
This is your discharge coefficient.



thanks for the response guys.The numbers that i got
2.19 valve .739 d/c @350cfm
2.25 valve .739 d/c @360cfm
2.30 valve .739 d/c @368cfm
all at .500 lift
I plugged the valve diameter into your spreed sheet (darin) and adjusted the flow numbers until i achieved the same d/c.Your right, that spreed sheet saves a bunch of time!
The question i was trying to get at was, will all of these valve combonations make about the same power,because the d/c numbers are the same? Or will the 2.30 valve that flows 18cfm more than the 2.19 valve trump the d/c #'s?
Hope this makes sense. --thanks again, --Shawn



shawn wrote:Thanks for posting that again Darin. Very cool spreed sheet. Ok, now another question. If you "go with the flow" then how much importance does the d/c #'s play?If you see a 10cfm gain by going to a larger valve, but have a drop in the d/c, will it make more power then?
thanks,
shawn


Rick360 wrote:Thanks for all the great info. Which has led me to more questions.
Is the "best" disch coef the highest that you can get it? Can it be too high causing something similar to the sonic choke at the ssr? Is the average over the range .200"- max lift most important or are some valve lift ranges more important?
What differences might be expected in other engine components (cam, manifold etc) between two engines one with a good D.C. head and one with a great D.C. head? I would think a better DC would like a little more int. duration since the air at the valve is moving faster. If the DC is not as good the intake charge should reverse directions sooner at the end of the intake cycle.
Thanks,
Rick


shawn wrote:I have a question, or a comment on reversion in a high speed engine. Is there really enough "time" for reversion to actually occur when running at speed?My impression was that intertia and wave/pulse tuning would all but eliminate almost anything but a "stall" at one point. I haven't investigated it enough, but what do you think?
Shawn

Darin Morgan wrote:Window Area = Valve diameter * Pi * lift
window area * 146 = theoretical maximum flow for that area

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