2broke2smoke said:
i still would like to see something more than opinion on this topic ... after searching previous posts it appears that no one on this entire site has ever contacted cummins / holset to ask the folks who designed it?
What made me to start thinking all "funny" about this topic was propeller design.
Props, wheels, vanes, fans, and yes... even thingys, have to deal with a few simple facts of life in motion. Two things in particular sparked my interest...
ATM or aerodynamic twisting motion... Essentially, a spinning blade is trying to "scoop air". This scooping motion tends to create a force on the blades that tries to turn them "
into the wind" . Kinda like when you stuck your hand out the car window when you were a kid... ... ..... if you allowed your body to go completely limp, your hand would have a tendency to assume a position where it would “scoop air the easiest”.
While that's real cute and all, CTM or centrifugal twisting moment, is the party crasher. Essentially... ..... A wheel spinning at high speed... and when I say high speed I mean freakin' cruisin like 15 to 30k RPM, like a modern TC does... . the blades, because of centrifugal force, try to "grow" longer. This tendency to "grow" also imparts a force on the blades that tend to drive the blades flat. Since flat blades can spin easier, with less resistance, it's their nature to increase their speed. Since turbo speed needs to be controlled electronically to a knats wee-wee... you can easily see the need to control this phenomenon. What makes CTM so crucial in this picture is that it’s
20 times stronger than ATM.
To more simply illustrate what I’m getting at, look at the 04. 5 Dodge service manual on page 1540 (it’s on-line). Notice the check for ... ”Impeller rubbing condition”. It’s a required check because debris sometimes passes between the wheel and housing
AND the blades do in fact stretch in normal service due to CTM. (far more likely than the damage a grain of sand in the gap could cause)
Also look at the language calling for “crack checks”. These checks exist solely because of the forces I’ve described earlier... they cause them.
So what does this have to do with this thread, or my claim that the “ring” is there for another reason? ... Basically, these forces can also be controlled by forcing the air charge to “hit” the wheel in a certain way, at a certain pressure, and a certain velocity, to avoid having a turbo that grenades every time it has to breathe hard. This one design consideration outweighs noise reduction by 1000 times. I’ve watched turbos similar in size and performance to the Holset, explode radially (outwards from the plane of rotation). The shrapnel had enough kinetic energy 20 yards away to penetrate the aluminum skin of the aircraft sitting next to it.
The cause?
An aircraft handler walked too close to an air multiplier (turbocharger) and the hood on his foul weather gear disrupted (for a microsecond) the airflow at the compressor inlet. BOOM!!!!
If that’s a silencer, why make it in the shape of a cone or convergent duct, when some cheap plastic Asian crap stuffed with foam acting like a muffler could perform the same task?
I ask these questions... ..... I can't help it.
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