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Creating Crankcase vacuum
This is just a thought. My knowledge of this is limited. But a post by Grady made the rusty wheels and cogs turn inside my noggin.
Could one plumb from the breather to a sealed catch can to the vacuum fittings on weber carbs to create vacuum in the crank case? Perhaps there's not near enough cfm pulling from those ports, but I'm just thinking out loud here.... |
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Maybe create vacuum from an outside source, e.g., a properly-sized vacuum pump, electric or belt-driven. Sherwood |
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The breather is just above the crankshaft and it pucks an unbelievable amount of oil. I had to change my oiling system so the breather could puck directly back into the oil tank. See below. That is a -16AN hose.
My next engine I plan to run a 993 oil pump. The larger scavange stage of the pump will help pull a vacuum, I hope. ![]() |
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Steve Weiner Rennsport Systems Portland Oregon (503) 244-0990 porsche@rennsportsystems.com www.rennsportsystems.com |
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Quote:
However, Dr. Ing. Weiner is right-- it takes a very big oil pump indeed, as well as a check valve, to actually get negative pressure in the case.
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Yeah I thought about this being a basic function of stock but was wondering if there's a way of tweaking it a little.
Thanks everyone for the answers. Quote:
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Steve - I have the GT3 pump in my short stroke 2.8. Which is still in the testing phase, so I could make seal modifications without having to pull the motor.
I hadn't planned on negative crankcase pressure, but it seems worth trying. More of concern is whether, without the right seals, I will be sucking race track dust into the motor with this pump. My race motors with the turbo pump have not had issues like this. 1) Will the GT3 nose bearing seal fit in the old #8 bearing? 2) I guess the GT3 flywheel seal won't fit my early turbo/carrera 3.0 case with the 6 bolt crank. I'd have go look elsewhere for a seal? Hawgryder mentioned a vendor, but I don't know if this is the kind of thing which can be retrofitted easily. Walt |
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Has anyone measured crankcase pressure on the stock engine?
It would be useful to know as it would then be possible to do a rough calibration of windage versus crankcase pressure. |
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Realize that testing the case pressure means plugging all external breathing paths to measure the gauge pressure. If not monitored correctly, excessive pressure will seek the easiest path to vent to atmosphere and create an oil leak, maybe temporary, maybe not. Sherwood |
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Walt,
Porsche Motorsports used a system on the GT-3 RSR engines that helped them make over 500 BHP using the GT-3R pump, special low tension crank seals and a one-way check valve. It may not fit the 6-bolt crank, however I've not checked that for myself to confirm. Bear in mind that these engines so configured do use some oil and thats no issue with a race engine that receives constant maintenance. GT-3 RSR engines turn over 9K so this was part of the efforts to control windage (along with case mods).
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There should be a 'typical' or optimum value and the suction side of the pump should help to create some pressure drop. The bigger the scavenge section the better it should be and it would be interesting just to fit a pressure trasnducer and see the result. |
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Sherwood |
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1) - ah, I can quit worrying about whether my GT3 pump will produce negative pressure without me having installed the right seals - because I don't have a check valve.
2) Seems to me that if the scavange side is larger than the pressure side, and you have a check valve or otherwise prevent air from entering from the atmosphere, then you will pull more, including air above the amount of oil which enters the cavity, out than comes in. The pump may not be super efficient as an air pump, since it is an unsealed gear pump not built to the tolerances optimum for air molecules. But the oil will act as a bit of a seal? And even if inefficient, it ought to work. Quite a bit of air gets entrained in the oil pumped out, does it not, under ordinary conditions. |
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Iwould agree that scavenge pumps are not the greatest air pumps and that the vacuum level is not too high. I just though it was worth having a few numbers and some targets.
I built a test rig, a few years ago, to measure the aeration of oil in a scavenge system. The efficiency of a de-aeration system is imortant to try to reduce oil tank volumes as settling times would normally need to be 1-2 minutes. The oil out of a scavenge pump looks a bit like Guinness when first poured into a glass and can be as high as 60% air in a high rpm engine. (Circa 20 000rpm) Measuring air volumes is tricky and we used irradiated oil - (not the Air-X system that has more recently been developed). |
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Porsche Motorsports as well as other experienced race engine builders have done extensive R&D on this subject using a variety of vacuum settings, low-tension rings, check valves, etc to determine optimal crankcase pressures (+/-) for maximum BHP.
Naturally, this assumes that all the normal windage mods have been performed on the case, cylinders, and crankshaft. These engines need very little vacuum for peak performance and the combination of breather check valve, proper seals, low-tension rings, and GT-3R oil pump (with scavenge mods in the heads) works very well.
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While the idea of using manifold vacuum to lower the crankcase pressure, it will only work at part throttle. At WOT there is no vacuum in the intake manifold, so no lowering of crankcase pressure. Part throttle lowering of crankcase pressure is useless.
-Andy
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Steve
I thought the benefit of low tension rings was reduced parasitic drag on the cylinder walls. I have assumed, perhaps wrongly, that such rings would allow a bit more oil to enter the combustion chamber past them. But how would they help decrease crankcase pressures? By allowing combustion chamber vacuum to suck some of the air back out of the case? That couldn't be right. Andy - doesn't the pressure in the intake system, including at least the lower part of the manifold, as well as the combustion chamber, drop below atmospheric during the intake cycle? Not as far at WOT as at closed or part throttle, but still below? Otherwise what pushes the charge air in? |
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Yes the pressure must drop some, but it is very "noisy" It fluctuates wildly as the air flows in and stops and the valve opens and closes. If you measure the manifold pressure (airplanes often measure this) you would see an average very close to atmospheric pressure. In fact if you had a very good intake system you would like to see above atmospheric pressure at the intake valve. That's what intake tuning is all about.
-Andy
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Vacuum
On a well sealed up cylinder package and a GT3 pump with no check valves we see the oil film moving toward the engine on the dyno in the tygon breather hose from the wall mounted oil tank, we have clamped that off for a quick pull and its worth 6 to 7 hp just like that, the vacuum helps stabilize the ring package as well. On engines that have a large to fair amount of breather activity due to poor ring seal or cyls. that can't stay round the breather looks like a -16 scavenge out line all the way up the hose to the tank. The oil temps can't be controlled with all that heat blowing by and several GT3 pumps wouldn't help. The drag race crowd uses belt driven vac pumps to generate that on wet sump engines and have witnessed enough vacuum to overcome the ability of the internal oil pump to function and the oil pressure goes away. One customer could not figure out why he kept loosing engines at 3/4 track until he had it on the dyno and seen what his pressure did, disabled the vac pump and the pressure was normal. He ended up moving his pump outside the block and it was fine.
Mike Bruns
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120 HP/Liter is all I ask
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Also the GT3 has two extra scavenge pumps on the camshaft housings to help vacuum.
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