15:1 or How low can you go...?

dvst8r

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So the recent compound turbo disscusion has me thinking, i know what your thinking: "oh no there must be a fire now" :p Anyway my thoughts had to do with pcp and cr. More specificly what is the best way to go about lowering the cr: Head work, tuliped valves, thicker head gasket, even more machining of the pistons over and above the "kerma mod" ect...? With that in mind what is the general consensus of those in the know cough... cough... tdimiester cough.. :D and our other engineering friends. What the lowest managable cr is? By managble I mean it must be able to start without needing ether, or some other starting aid and must be able to idle on its own, however I don't care about off boost performance or emissions, but those considerations are open for disscution anyway.

I would start with my guess, but to be honest I don't even really have a clue. :confused:
 

mojogoes

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The motor which i have now was initially lowered to 17.1 or very slightly lower and had a very hard time in starting tdi-rs had to prolong the glow plug cycle 3 time's as long , and may question other people who state there running the same cr and is why it was raised up to 17.3.1 and ran just fine.

Its my belief that this is where a better fuel would also come into play and i know people say just add 2 lbs of boost pressure instead of desplacement which would give you hotter air anyway because its off the turbos efficiency map/line and you can't start the engine because there not enough heat/pressure produce because of the lowering of the cr where does that leave the more boost theory.
 
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Piranha

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I'm no expert,
so i'm probably wrong!!

But here goes:

If you lower the cr by X% how much more boost will you need to get the same amount of power??

So if my thonking is right (which I doubt) if you lower the cr, you need more boost, needing a bigger turbo, leading to more turbo lag???

Any comments????
 

gbangs

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There was (or still is) an old gasser racer's trick that for every point less in CR, you add 6 psi boost. The point is, the more volume in the chamber, the more air you can pack in, which leads to more fuel that can be added, which gives more power.
Here is an example of reducing CR in a diesel...
http://www.62-65-dieselpage.com/finale.htm
Earlier releases of this article included pictures which showed the GM 6.5TD combustion chamber not unlike our TDI.
If you read through the article, they are making crazy power with this engine.
 

RabbitGTDJoe

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Speaking of lower compression...
just back from the machine shop yesterday...thanks to the gf's brother who was able to help me out...










I put the compression ratio right around where Kerma's is (17:1 or so) with the exception that this was done on a precision CNC lathe so everything is exact to the .001.I believe his were on the bridgeport. I got lucky finding that someone could do this for me for next to nothing. Guess it pays, her brother runs a machine job were they make precision worm gear drives, etc. for nuclear power plants, windmills, etc.
Basically the same mod as he had his machinist do though...
I think the cold start problems relative to lowering CR are greatly about the way you go about lowering the CR. Was TDI-RS's original motor running larger van pistons but then also had a shimmed gasket?
Kerma reports very little in the way of cold start problems in previous threads about piston modification, etc. which DOES NOT increase the amount of dead space in between the piston and the head when it comes to starting. However, shimming the head gaskets does. Reading the SAE papers on the TDI motor orginally, dead space was something that the VW engineers worked very hard on to "limit". Only ill effects reported from lowering CR via piston modification is that cold starts were a bit more smoky, but not hard starting...
Maybe Kerma will chime :)

My pistons after I CC them here before I send them out will be going to SwainTech to be coated on the dome with a TBC or possibly Goldcoat to keep the heat where it belongs as well to block heat dissapation through the piston. They will also receive PC-9 on the skirts. With the lip now removed, CR is effectively lowered, potential hot spots removed and once coated should yield more of a complete burn because of coating barriers applied. I only wish I could afford to have the exhaust ports done too!

By the way...anyone have the stock CC measurement for a ALH piston? I wanted to calculate my "after" CR to the tee with that measurement so I had it for sure. I had it here before I sent the pistons out about a month ago for her brother to do but I recorded the information on a computer that recently crashed :( I lost all info as well as alot of other research and documentation I had made thus far. I wanted to see the before machining, machined and then CC again after coating just to see how accurate the coating claims are for applying the TBC coatings.



Joe
 
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mojogoes

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Diesel-Des had the same coating done on the pistons and others...he couldn't do any before and after tests because a few days later the motor blow , i would think the way in which tdi-rs lowered this engine's cr not only by the pistons but also via the shortened rods contributed to the cr being some what lower than what you and others have taken it to .
 

KERMA

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Car is smoky on the first cold startup of the day, but after that smokeless. Starts on the first turn of the key just like normal.

Lower PCP should allow more room for timing as well. Too bad IP limits timing.

There is an amazing amount of slop between the individual pistons' combustion chambers. Machining them like this could also provide a benefit in that regard.

IMO shimming the head or shaving the piston crown or shorter stroke is the wrong way to approach lowering the CR. No one can argue with Simon's results, but I bet that rig would perform even better if the work was done inside the piston cavity instead of outside.

6 psi per point of CR sounds like a lot. Gassers trend to run about half the CR, wonder if that has anything to do with it? 3 psi sounds more reasonable, just a shot in the dark.
 

KERMA

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You may want to consider taking some emery cloth to round the sharp edge before having them coated.
 

mojogoes

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Each to there own here and i think tdi-rs has had 35+psi through this motor with no problems another sign its a proper lowering not a guesstimate .
 

RabbitGTDJoe

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Kerma,

Yeap, was planning on cleaning the insides there before sending them out. I was anxious to take pics so didn't even do anything to them when I got them home last night.

Got something that'll help me CC them today, so I'm going to figure out what the CR is pretty damn close and report.

I had to go the route of machining the pistons...even in the past gasser motors I've done, the last being a Lysholm stg-4 'rado, the considerations were brought to machining before increasing dead space...but then, this topic has been hashed and rehashed. Your right though... the results speak for there own...

Joe
 

TDIMeister

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Take my opinion FWIW, but I agree with Kerma above that shortening the rods as a means to reduce CR (or to achieve ANYTHING for that matter) is not the best way. ACHTUNG! I said, "Not the best way"; I didn't say it won't work, so don't flame me to taking my words out of context.

Shortening the rods without any other changes is no different to adding a thicker head gasket, and that destroys your squish zone and does all sorts of no-so-obvious badness as well. For example, with shorter con-rods, the pistons are permanently lower down the cylinder bore, meaning fuel is sprayed higher up the piston bowl ever closer to the thermally-critical bowl-lip area, and where fuel is now injected into a non-optimized area of air motion.

Not only that, shortening the con-rods while maintaining the stroke worsens an already disadvantageous L/R ratio of the TDI. The TDI engine already has a very low L/R ratio when benchmarked with other engines of similar design, 144/95.5=1.508. I would be pleased to debate with anyone the merits and demerits about low or high L/R ratios but I won't get into it now. It suffices to make my point that further reducing the L/R ratio from the current already very low value in stock form is plainly the WRONG direction.

Having said this, I go back to my first statement that this doesn't mean that the engine "won't work" or "will blow up." I'm just saying it's not the best way.
 

TDIMeister

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dvst8r said:
More specificly what is the best way to go about lowering the cr: Head work, tuliped valves, thicker head gasket, even more machining of the pistons over and above the "kerma mod" ect...?
I consider thicker head gaskets and any other means that raises the squish clearance or reduces the squish area to be the WORST thing you can do to reduce CR, but is the most common practise because it's a) easy; b) cheap; c) undo-able; d) doesn't take much brains.

The best is to enlarge the bowl volume, IF AND ONLY IF it is done with understanding and consideration of the fluid mechanics of the air flow and fuel injection spray. This means I don't subscribe to indiscriminate machining of the piston bowl either. I believe -- actually I know -- that VW has done extensive benchmarking, design, analysis and test-bench work over decades of development by people far more qualified to do this than anyone on this board, to arrive at what it feels is an optimal design for the engine's performance goals. I guess what I'm trying to summarise is that I think VW's design shouldn't be mucked around too much :)

Of course we are hot-rodders and have different goals in mind; that goes without saying. The problem is we look at individual components and individual problems (e.g. reducing CR) when we need to see the engine as an intimately interrelated, interacting system (e.g. increasing power output requires increased fuelling --> requiring increased air flow and boost --> requiring proper turbo matching --> requiring management of thermal and mechanical stresses (PCP --> CR reduction, etc.,etc.) and a whole cascade of other factors to be considered; what I've listed above is just the tip of the iceberg.)

I think the best compromise to reduce CR short of the availability of custom, properly-engineered low-compression pistons for the TDI is to VERY VERY slightly enlarge the bowl overall WHILE keeping the overall geometry and all the internal bowl proportions as much as possible, which also includes the ratio of the piston to bowl opening diameters. The rest can be achieved by increasing the depth (but NEVER enlarging the radial cross-section) of the NON-SQUISH areas of the piston crown, that is, the figure-8 shape for the valve reliefs. I believe there is sufficient thickness for a fairly substantial volume increase here (in the order of 1 mm or so more depth) with minimal consequences, but keep very importantly in mind the bowl lip will now be thinner by the same amount!

What the lowest managable cr is?
I think this can only be answered through the extent of the machining that is done in a judicious manner with the considerations I listed above. The latest Audi V8 TDI has a CR of 16.5:1, so I would use that as a starting point. Properly done, I think 15.5:1 can be done without too much negative effects on cold-start (glow plugs would have to come on at a much higher ambient temperature threshold, though), driveability and efficiency.
 
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diesel des

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I was at 16.7:1 once with a thick gasket. I would start and run, but was smokey and would smoke at idle and light load even when warm. But 16:7 with proper pistons would be workable im sure, maybe even 16:1.

How about custom forged pistons? Anyone get in contact with a manifacture and pice a tdi piston up. Just make a bowl with no lip. They could machine that? Thanks,des.
 

TDIMeister

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I think PCPs for an extra-high boost TDI can be managed though a combination of maintaining a moderate static geometric compression ratio (in the order of 16.5:1 or so) and intake valve closure timing. I did some calculations and simulations of a cam that closes the intake valves about 7 degrees @ .050 later than OEM (I have to look at my numbers again to confirm), which would reduce the effective CR by about a point.

5 cams were made and are in the hands of their owners now; one I am aware is already installed, but I am still waiting for some dyno results. Irrespective of any HP gains by the cam itself, I calculated that PCP is reduced by over 100 PSI or nearly 7 bar for any given torque output scenario. This doesn't sound like much, but 7 bar might be the difference that breaks the camel's back so to speak, between a borderline safe zone to something breaking (say 200 bar vs 207 bar)

mrchill said:
On the edge of death, the engine is at its finest. Just like lightbulbs are brightest prior to death. Some people become heroes in the face of death. Death, or near death may just be the answer.
 

KERMA

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TDIMeister said:
VW has done extensive benchmarking, design, analysis and test-bench work over decades of development ... to arrive at what it feels is an optimal design for the engine's performance goals. I guess what I'm trying to summarise is that I think VW's design shouldn't be mucked around too much :)

Of course we are hot-rodders and have different goals in mind; that goes without saying.
VW's "PERFORMANCE" goals for this 90 hp car can be summed up in three design criteria:

1. Emissions
2. Emissions
3. Emissions

The bowl shape is there to optimize EMISSONS, performance be damned.

POWERPLUS nozzles already spray at an angle and shape that differs from stock. Voila, all that careful bowl shape design work is for naught.

Yes, we are hot-rodding and we have different goals. :)
 

GoFaster

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Agreed, for most hot rodders that drive the vehicles on a daily basis the objective is to have an engine that makes power, doesn't blow apart, and still has decent driveability. The emissions aren't a factor as long as it passes local inspection. Machining the lip off the bowl might sacrifice emissions, but it does eliminate the highest-temperature spot on the piston and reduces surface area exposed to the heat, so from the performance and not blow the engine apart point of view, I still think it's the way to go ...

Reducing the surface area might even help with cold starting a little.
 

mojogoes

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TdiMeister..........since your good with the figures by how much would the ignition be retarded by lowering the cr by 1 or 2 points and by lowering the cr wouldn't the fuel that's use have to have a shorter injection combustion period because of this fact , and something that adding say 10psi of boost could never be able to address.
 

TDIMeister

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Ignition delay is lengthened with reduced temperature at SOI, no doubt about that. How much can't be quantified easily because it depends on several factors including combustion chamber design and fuel. But it's nothing that cannot be solved through revised timing maps and higher cetane fuel. Having combustion delayed in a magnitude of a few microseconds can't be a bad thing anyway if the objective is to further reduce PCP. I mean, this is what we want, right? It would be nice to have the efficiency afforded by running high compression ratios with no need for regard for PCPs, but that is wishful thinking. Something has to give.
 

RabbitGTDJoe

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TDIMeister said:
I consider thicker head gaskets and any other means that raises the squish clearance or reduces the squish area to be the WORST thing you can do to reduce CR, but is the most common practise because it's a) easy; b) cheap; c) undo-able; d) doesn't take much brains.


I think of squish in a much more simple way...

Squish = SACRED territory:cool: not to be messed with...

Machining the pistons was much easier with the build that I am doing and this is a spring/summer/fall car so it doesn't see winter. Also, emissions are an issue with me as it is going into my MK1 Rabbit. :) I like the do it right, do it once philosophy and as it has been outlined so many times before in the lowering compression threads, etc. increasing dead space via shimming works, but isn't the most "efficient" way to go about doing it.

On another note...no sooner got the pistons home that they are now on their way to SwainTech for their TBC and PC-9 coatings... luckily, they will be there tomorrow and there is a week turnaround so I'll be anxiously awaiting their return.

Joe
 

mojogoes

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Rabbit we'll see how much she smokes when you run her but if you think its going to be minimal with no lip uumm and Meister ignition delay is lengthened with reduced temperature" we know our chamber design...nothing changed there then and using a better fuel i will be doing .

And if on the same small scale 1 mill here and 1/2 a mill there gives taken from or added to an engine by lowering the cr 1 or 2 point is not minute and can equally be measured and has a bigger impact on running and power than one might think , i've also seen papers on the subject reporting as much which i have posted here in the fuels & lubricants section .

Take ether for instance if the right amount is used it will shorten the ignition delay but if too much is added it has a cooling effect which lowers efficiency and power and these are not big differences in quantities , and the same can be same of the lowering of the cr by 1 or 2 points = bigger changes in pressure and heat then one might think.
 

RabbitGTDJoe

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Sounds good....can't wait for April then...

Kerma's kinda already dropped proof of the smoking though with the modified pistons and stock headgasket... Only on cold start...then nothing... yet a very fast and smooth running car. Efficient.
Mine is the same modification with the exception that I am having mine coated now and I'm going with a mechanical setup. I have airflow improvements with the plenum style manifold I'm cooking up, but fully expect there to be some smoke...
Just couldn't stand to get rid of that James Bond smokescreen feature! It was so much fun just a few years ago with the modified IDI TD going to WF03 leading a pack of wolves and smoking in a S-VR's screen :) Good times...

Joe
 

KERMA

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BTW fuel economy isn't affected by what I did to the pistons.

Only downside I can see is the cold start smoke.
 

mojogoes

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So what if i said by lowering your cr by the 1 point or so it made the fuel burn as if it were down by 5/10 points cetane and that's why you have smoke first start up , and this in turn would lead to more smoke wot.

So if you've started with a 45 cetane fuel it could be burning as little as a 35 cetane'd numbered fuel.?

Want some super cetane now ?..............................i'm guessing so
 

RabbitGTDJoe

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Yum... higher cetane would be nice.... 40 is the limit around here...suppose with the stanadyne additive I run in my current dailys (79 Diesel bunny) fuel it might bump it up 3-4 points...possibly. Plus, its winter...even worse quality fuel... not that the low sulfur fuel is great anyways. Replace pump seals!

Joe
 

dvst8r

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Well I suppose I should jump back in as I did start the thread :rolleyes:. From some further reading on the subject. GM went to 16.8:1 in there new duramax LBZ coded engine this year some of the reason was for better emissions the other was to handle the added output of the motor, now the important part, due to the lower cr they installed a 1000watt grid heater for idle and low load conditions. Hmmm so does this mean that 16.5 to one is around as low as you can go before idle and low load problems start to occur?

Thanks for everyones imput I am learing more then i am forgetting :p

Also as I am a very visually orintated learner, could some one draw a sketch of where TDIMeister is proposing we remove the material from the piston. I just can't picture it in my head, even a ruff paint sketch will do.;)
 

TDIMeister

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Credit for the original pictures go to tdi rs (Simon Cooper) who modified his TDI pistons way back in 2002. Now you know who did it first.

The full thread is here: http://forums.tdiclub.com/showthread.php?t=16470


The valve relief pockets highlighted in green are OK to deepen a bit; as you can see from the next picture, I believe 1mm still leaves sufficient meat around the critical bowl lip area. Do NOT, however, enlarge the diameter of the reliefs. This cuts into squish area, which is basically the entire area highlighted in translucent red (minus the bowl of course). You have no good reason to do it unless you are enlarging the valves and need to clear them. And that also means, do NOT touch any of the red area (that's why I made it red). :p If you think squish is not important, consider why VW would go to the trouble of having THREE gasket thicknesses only 0.08 mm (.0031") difference between each to maintain the proper squish clearance. :rolleyes:



Plan view showing the machining TDI RS had made. I would do recommend pretty much exactly as he has done. IMO, I don't think the bowl lip should be completely eliminated, resulting in the straight up "W" appearance of the bowl when looked in section like #5 in the figure below. I think there should be some lip left, as TDI RS has done.




In this excellent picture of the TDI piston in section (thanks for sacrificing a piston in the name of science :) ), I've highlighted in dashed lines roughly how the original lip would have looked, but it is greatly exaggerated... what I'm trying to show here is that if you MUST muck around with machining the bowl to get more volume, roughly follow the proportions of the existing bowl, although the width (breadth) can be widened relative to increasing the depth by approx. a 2:1 ratio particularly around the 8 o'clock position. Try to avoid increasing the depth of the bowl; make most of the volume increase through an increase in the width, particularly around the 8 o'clock quadrant, because that is where the fuel spray is aimed at. The key is preventing impingement of the fuel spray -- under momentum due to higher velocity (injection pressure from upgraded pump) and higher mass (larger droplet size due to larger nozzle holes).

I've only sketched one-half of the section because it's exceptionally hard to get it right using the rudimentary drawing tools in PowerPoint, which I used to fool around with these pics. The centre hump should be left alone, with only machining clean-up. It does little in the combustion process, and significantly cutting into it will result in a low-swirl velocity in that area that will hamper mixing. and combustion.



View of TDI RS's pistons in their home. Looks great! :) The only think I would add to that is to do a thermal barrier coating to the pistons. and (at least exhaust) valves.



Another view.
 
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TDIMeister

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By the way, after machining the pistons, make sure you break ALL sharp edges with as generous radii as practical. Nothing burns pistons and causes stress risers than sharp edges. The only exception is, whatever you haven't otherwise touched, LEAVE THEM ALONE!
 
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mojogoes

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I think the piston that are in there now are different are they not Simon , i'm thinking these were the first ones that were used.
 

TDIMeister

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Well I never figured out what is the relationship between Simon and "fred dibnah," the latter of whom originally posted those pics. I always thought there were either business partners or relatives or online alter egos... that fred used to speak for Simon as much as you do now <shrug>
 
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