Your point was quite obvious, and I responded to it by stating that a chamber fan could perform the same task as displacing the spent gases with more air/fuel mix does in a much more rapid fashion.Affliction wrote:You missed the point! I don't need chamber fans this way! And adding complexity to somthing so simple is a Rube Goldberg contraption!
Chamber fans also induce turbulence in the flame front(s) within the chamber, effectively increasing the burn rate, and thus power. This has been proven by numerous members, and if you stepped around your unjustified arrogance for a while, you would see the light as well.
Sometimes, simple isn't the answer. A certain degree of complexity is required for many things to be as efficient and precise as possible.
I laughed.Affliction wrote:You just stepped in crap! I happen to be a liscenced mechanic with 15 years experience buddy! I know I know way more than you on carburation and fuel metering, Dumbass!
Carburetors can be adjusted extremely precisely via needle valves which control the flow of fuel. Adjustments can be made in fractions of an inch - very precise compared to your setup. Obviously, if you did know anything about them, you would know this.Affliction wrote:Carburators are not precise at all, they do no more than my simple fuel meter does.
Temperature effects the density of all gases linearly, and thusly does not have an effect on the fuel mixture given an identical meter pressure. Obviously, you know absolutely nothing about ideal gas laws, as I expected.Affliction wrote:Don't think that having " so much propane pressure in my little chamber is the exact fuel mix" It's not, there are variables. Air density changes with temperature and elevation so eliminating variables such as this is a consistent way to do it.
Elevation effects the mixture, but in this case, your own argument automatically turns against you. In a traditional meter setup, an alternative meter pressure can be determined using the equation P1*V1=P2*V2. Your setup will require you to once again guess at an appropriate setting.
You crack me up. Just wait until Joanna comes back and rips on you.