What range of temperature do you see? under full load and max boost, how high can it get?
Thanks...
Thanks...
What range of temperature do you see? under full load and max boost, how high can it get?
Thanks...
i have been for the last 5-6 years. It is a none issues, as I have never seen mine go past 110°, never. It usually runs 10-20° cooler then outside temps. It's such a boring gauge, I just recently took it out and replaced it with a dual needle air gauge to monitor tank and bag pressure.
Sorry I'm only reporting what I've been monitoring for the last 5-6 years!!
A believe me, nothing is impossible.
ps. Yes I was measuring the air temp just before it entered the engine. I was using a Auto Meter Intake Air Gauge.
And Yes I have used them many other times on a dragster I had that was also Turbocharged. My current project, Project Cobra'33, is Supercharged and I am installing a data acquisition system on it from Innovate Motor sports. I'll have read-outs from Intake air temp, both before and after the super charger, at least 2 EGT sensors, 4-O2 sensors, fuel pressure both supply side and return, oil temp and pressure, water temp, transmission temp, boost pressure, 2-cylinder head temps, battery voltage, and throttle position travel.
WELL, then you have achieved an engineering and physics miracle - being able to cool one medium to an even cooler temperature than the one used to accomplish that change - using your technology, we'd never need to use refrigerant in our air conditioning systems again, just use air-to-air intercoolers, and duct the resulting cooler than ambient air into the truck cab!![]()
What Y-knot sees makes perfect sense. In cruise, we carry 5-10 psi of boost. This air is heated slightly, run across an intercooler where the charge air is brought down to near ambient temps. Then it hits the plumbing going into the engine where velocity will increase (velocity increases, pressure decreases, temperature decreases - Bernoulli's again) dropping the temperature. And if you drop near-ambient temperatures there's a good chance you'll end up with below ambient.
Obviously there's a lot of factors at play here, but I wouldn't say that it's impossible to have lower than ambient charge air temps. No miracle, just basic physics.
Where is the IAT sensor located on an 02?
It's tucked in between the fuel filter and rear of the engine on the driver's side of the engine - sorta hard to get to...
The only sensor in that area is the MAP sensor there is no other sensor in that area on mine except for the temp sensor on the back of the head. Is it possible it doesn't have one? I will look close behind the filter itself.
PC12Driver, that is a fascinating post, and it makes sense, except I'm not clear on why the velocity increases as the air goes into the engine?
The only sensor in that area is the MAP sensor there is no other sensor in that area on mine except for the temp sensor on the back of the head. Is it possible it doesn't have one? I will look close behind the filter itself.
YUP - but these trucks are NOT airplanes flying at 20,000 feet or better altitude, and hundreds of miles per hour - your example is fine, just doesn't really match or fit our application!
I'm very familiar with venturi effect and similar - but the PSI readings taken on our trucks, both for boost gauges and the IAT are AT the intake manifold, that is, our WHOLE INTAKE SYSTEM is pressurized, and at nearly the same PSI - and while there is SOME PSI head loss across the intercooler, I seriously doubt there is enough venturi-type effect or PSI differential anywhere between the turbo and intake valves in our engines to supply a 10-20 degree drop in relation to outside air temps!
And I'll say it again in OUR truck application, running our intercoolers thru 100 degree outside ambient air temps at normal cruising speeds is VERY unlikely to result in air at the intake into the engine, of 80-90 degrees.