Originally posted by Oerdin
Then you are simply wrong.
Then you are simply wrong.
I was comparing 2 4 cylinder engines, one with a turbo, and one without. An NA (naturally aspirated) 2.4L 4 cylinder nissan engine will consume less gas than a 2.0L 4 cylinder turbo engine for the same car.
Originally posted by Oerdin
A V-6 turbo will consume less gas then a V-8.
A V-6 turbo will consume less gas then a V-8.
Let me educate you a bit. Your V8 at WOT (wide open throttle) will most likely consume less gas than a V6 Turbo at WOT. Its all about air/fuel ratios. The displacement factor is eliminated when comparing turbo engines with NAs when talking about fuel management.
A regular air/fuel ratio in an NA car, depending on its compression ratio is about 14:1 (14 parts of air for 1 part fuel). With a turbo engine, its usually about 12:1.
The more gas you have in your explosion the colder the detonation will be, keeping the combustion chamber cooler so the mixture doesn't pre-detonate at the wrong time, breaking the engine.
So, the reason why the displacement factor is eliminated between turbos and NA engines is because the NA engine sucks in air, no more than the displacement can physicaly allow, but on a turbo engine, the turbo blows in air by force depending on the turbos capacity, which is called boost and calculated in PSI. And automaticly, the cars ECU calculates the amount of air getting in the combustion chamber and feeds fuel accordingly.
So to make this very basic, lets say you have a 5.0 liter V8 mustang. At WOT you car will suck in 5.0l of air. So your air fuel ratio is 5.0L of air for 0.35L of gas. (14:1)
I have a 3.2L supra, running at 10 PSI, which means that my air fuel ration would be about 16L of air for 1.45L of gas. (12:1)
Your NA engine runs on vaccuum and my turbo engine runs on boost pressure when the turbo is spooling.
Now please shut and stop bull****ting like you know anything about cars other than what you see in the sunday morning paper.
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