|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
DIY water alcohol injection setup!
I did a water/alcohol injection setup over the weekend with great results. Since I still dont have the manifold I want and a regular intercooler, some chemical intercooling was in order. I'm planning to take it to the track this week and its the last test and tune before the season is over. I had to do something!
The nice thing about this setup is that its boost sensative, as in the more boost you make the more it will flow. As boost drops off the flow does too, so your not stuck with a on/off only window that can be too much at a certain rpm or boost level and then not enough at another. Parts needed: bottle of some kind small inection orfice (I used carb accel pump discharge nozzle) Ebay cheapo boost controller a few feet of windshield washer system hose or vac hose fishtank one way valve vac line "T" to tap into manifold pressure hose to injection pump zip ties I used a carb accel pump dump jet out of a Solex one barrel carb of a VW bug. I drilled the orfice to "60" (.6mm) and that has worked out to be a good size. I could probably size it up another .05, but I dont want to go too big and then have to get another one tio replace it. For me, the 60 made a noticable difference and there is no clatter when its running with it on. A nice side benefit besides the intercooling is that it will help clean your combustion chamber as the water turns to steam. Also, it really helps clean up the smoke! I went from a haze of smoke at 15lbs boost to absolutely nothing under full boost at WOT with the injection setup. Here are some pictures: I positioned the orfice just ahead of the compressor wheel so the turbo can help atomize the water. Also, you may notice inline there is a one way valve for a fish tank. That keeps it from bleeding water into the intake when the water level is above the orfice. It is installed in the direction of flow, but provides just enough resistance with the little rubber flapper inside to keep it from bleeding. I've also incorperated a inline bost controller to regulate the boost level that the system starts to flow. Without it, you would drain your tank in no time as these cars run a couple to 5 lbs of boost on the highway. I have the system tuned to start to flow at around 8lbs off boost, so regular highway cruising there is no flow, but as soon as you lay into the throttle it begins to work. As the boost increases, so the does the pressure in the bottle and therefore the flow does as well. Here is a diagram: I used an old windshield washer bootle. You can use anything as long as it can be pressurized. Jason
__________________
Back again with a '84 760 GLE D24T/ZF SOLD but not forgotten! 1984 760 Sedan, built D24Tic/ T-5 swapped My engine build: http://www.d24t.com/showthread.php?t...t=engine+build T-5 swap: http://d24t.com/showthread.php?399-W...to-quot-w-pics! |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
great idea, I like it a lot.
one day I will try it.
__________________
Volvo 760 GLE TD 1984 Volvo S60 D5 2005 Miata Mk2,5 SC M45 2002 |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Did you notice what kind of power increase?
That idea really interests me. I have soon my IC assembled (only minor work left) and been thinking too about water/alcohol injection to my car, since at this moment i dont have money required to buy bigger turbo and "liquid head" to pump. Tho with IC there comes problem, since it will chill water steam back to liquid form of water, and thereafter just fall in bottom of IC. Nice job anyways, absolutely! I will re-desing your idea a bit, to work on IC, and also some minor modifications. But, keep going, smoke your neighborhoughs! |
#4
|
||||
|
||||
I noticed a decent increase. Also, using windshield washer fluid has water and alcohol, so the alcohol is being burned as is just like adding more fuel. I don't know if you would really need it if you already have an intercooler, I'm still all hot air! If you were pushing lots of boost, I think it would help out as the intercooler can only do so much, but at 10 to 15lbs of boost I cant say for sure if it would help on top of the intercooler thats already there. The orfice I have is pretty small and it sprays the water in directly at the turbine wheel. That chops it up even more, I don't think it would collect at the bottom of your intercooler but who knows. It should be in water vapor form untill it gets into the engine, it turns to steam during combustion.
Jason
__________________
Back again with a '84 760 GLE D24T/ZF SOLD but not forgotten! 1984 760 Sedan, built D24Tic/ T-5 swapped My engine build: http://www.d24t.com/showthread.php?t...t=engine+build T-5 swap: http://d24t.com/showthread.php?399-W...to-quot-w-pics! |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
I think i will add nozzle straight to intake manifold, a bit towards
"sucking ditches". So opening valves (see jbg i learned new words) which cause continuos suction in hand with about 1bar turbo pressure, should keep injected water on move, so it wont form liquid on bottom of the intake manifold. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Damn.. Some problems if i think to locate nozzle straight to intake manifold.
Pressure there is too 1bar, same pressure which tryes to push liquid from water container to manifold.. So that wont work, atleast wont work so at it would be any help. Need to think different way. |
|
|