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Chris Sunkin 02-25-2008 07:52 AM

1 Attachment(s)
When we used the systems on the old Banks turbo systems, we took pressure from the manifold and used it to pressurize the holding tank. That made it self-powered and self regulated. 1lb boost pushed a little through the nozzles, 10 pushed alot. Nowadays it looks like you can do it much more precisely- http://www.alcohol-injection.com

If you want to read some of the early tech info written on the concept-

Ted G 02-25-2008 08:17 AM


Originally Posted by jeff1000man (Post 2458783)
Will any of this stuff work without a blower?

Sure, although on a boat there is a supply issue. I have used it on high compression street engines and ran regular fuel, only bringing in water at low vacuum/ open throttle times (rarely in a car). On a boat you are under a load all the time so when you bump the compression and timing up to make more power you will squirt a lot of water, requiring a LOT of water to inject. Obviously if you add methanol that is even more of an issue. If you throw a vacuum gauge on your engine and run some vacuum at cruise, then you could make it work with a little tuning. But you will not see huge numbers, just a nice increase and safety from bad gas.

jeff1000man 02-25-2008 08:32 AM


Originally Posted by insptech (Post 2458822)
Sure, although on a boat there is a supply issue. I have used it on high compression street engines and ran regular fuel, only bringing in water at low vacuum/ open throttle times (rarely in a car). On a boat you are under a load all the time so when you bump the compression and timing up to make more power you will squirt a lot of water, requiring a LOT of water to inject. Obviously if you add methanol that is even more of an issue. If you throw a vacuum gauge on your engine and run some vacuum at cruise, then you could make it work with a little tuning. But you will not see huge numbers, just a nice increase and safety from bad gas.

I think I will stick with the NOS for now. Going to try some stuff in the next couple weeks.

nocigarette 02-25-2008 08:33 AM


Originally Posted by Chris Sunkin (Post 2458801)
When we used the systems on the old Banks turbo systems, we took pressure from the manifold and used it to pressurize the holding tank. That made it self-powered and self regulated. 1lb boost pushed a little through the nozzles, 10 pushed alot. Nowadays it looks like you can do it much more precisely- http://www.alcohol-injection.com

If you want to read some of the early tech info written on the concept-

That is a good read thanks....

WildWarrior 02-25-2008 10:01 AM


Originally Posted by Chris Sunkin (Post 2458801)
When we used the systems on the old Banks turbo systems, we took pressure from the manifold and used it to pressurize the holding tank. That made it self-powered and self regulated. 1lb boost pushed a little through the nozzles, 10 pushed alot. Nowadays it looks like you can do it much more precisely- http://www.alcohol-injection.com

If you want to read some of the early tech info written on the concept-

Unfortunately at first , now fortunately for us after countless hrs of of R & D work fine tuning own own turn key Marine injection kits. None of these main stream although great quality water injection systems are designed to run 100% methanol or have any data for flow rate,jetting etc needed to sustain our industries big CI blown hp levels.
Right down to the proper gaskets,solenoids,plugs, gap etc. As Methanol will eat standard gaskets as well as bonding agents for lunch in a few hrs,the leading kits solenoids will also only last one or two blasts in this application etc, we have tried them all..
We now have over 120 flawless hrs on this set up.
Simple and safer hp and we have averaged approx 10+ gallons of Meth to 250 gallons of 93 pump gas running as much as 15+ lbs of 14-71 High Helix boost with even and very acceptable EGTs..The only thing You will require besides an engine assemble designed to handle your hp level as well as an excellent cooling system will be an EGT gauge to help tune as you add to your boost levels.
Low water temps and EGT data are a must!

BlackJack58 02-25-2008 08:32 PM

I was just wondering about these water injection systems the other day, and possible marine applications. I remember them back in the late 70's/early 80's...reading articles in Car Craft and looking through the Summit Racing catalog.

As I recall, those [water only] systems were reported to deliver not only a mild HP boost but even slightly better MPG as well, depending on how they were set up. Actually, the efficiency factor was what really had my interest this time around...though more HP is always welcome!

Elite Marine 02-25-2008 08:48 PM

Can it be used to protect the engine at high boost and not really add huge HP???

I have enough problems with HP!!!!!

Seriously. I would be interested in learning more. When do you guys go public with your equipment?




Runninghot - Where's John located?


Thanks guys,

Kirk

RunninHotRacing163.1 02-25-2008 09:05 PM

[QUOTE=Pantera28-650HP;2459890]Can it be used to protect the engine at high boost and not really add huge HP???

I have enough problems with HP!!!!!

Seriously. I would be interested in learning more. When do you guys go public with your equipment?




Runninghot - Where's John located?


Johns in Yorkville RT 47 & 126
give him a jingle he's knows this chit backwords & forwards .. I believe he's in Dubai or japan this week but will call you back :cool-smiley-011:

links 02-25-2008 09:19 PM

Not just HP!! Methanol/ Water Injection used properly will make an engine much more efficient across the board! It is recommended to run a 50/50 to a 60/40 Methanol to Water ratio for various reasons and is considered extremely dangerous and detrimental to engine components at 100%! We will be doing a fair amount of research on this in the coming weeks and months as well as real world testing on Gas and Diesel engines.

Michael1 02-25-2008 09:28 PM

I think it fell out of favor for a bunch of reasons:

1) Knock sensors allowed engines to be tuned much closer to insipient knock today than 30 years ago.
2) Fast burn combustion chambers allow for higher compression ratios. The new BMW M3 V8 has a 12:1 compression ratio!
3) Fuel injection manifolds are not good at distributing water injected at the throttle body, so a decent system would require setting up some sort of port injection.
4) A system should detect when the water reservoir is empty, and adjust the engine parameters accordingly, if you are really going to get the full benefit of water injection.
5) The amount of engine octane requirement only drops by 1 to 2 points.
6) People are lazy about filling another tank, and/or they forget.

That being said, it is still a viable system.

Michael


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