This car is going to kill me lol
Aiming for 500kgs or under as well.
One for each rear wheel!
How are you planning on combining their oomph and getting the to run in union so to speak?
Looks crazy
like this
http://www.mkengineering.co.uk/apps/photos/photo?photoid=10993799
i see how it works now but is there a diff in any of that?
Also how can you get the engines to run at exactly that same rate so that one is not carying the other if you know what i mean?
the stronger engine will pull the other along i asked martin the same question when i seen the twin engined kitty
quote:
Originally posted by locoboy
i see how it works now but is there a diff in any of that?
Also how can you get the engines to run at exactly that same rate so that one is not carying the other if you know what i mean?
Nice one! Straight eight!
Same technique as Russ used on the Furore? His seemed to go well!
Mike
Nice one
Cheers for the comments guys.
It will take time to get it all running together but i have no deadline so i will just keep at it till it goes right.
Surely there should be some kind of diff bit in the shaft connected directly to the engines to allow the engines to work at different speeds. They
are not going to be exactly in tune so you will not be maximising your output from both engines as one will inevitably be dragging the other alone and
wasting BHP in doing so................
Or have i still not got it!
quote:
Originally posted by locoboy
Surely there should be some kind of diff bit in the shaft connected directly to the engines to allow the engines to work at different speeds. They are not going to be exactly in tune so you will not be maximising your output from both engines as one will inevitably be dragging the other alone and wasting BHP in doing so................
Or have i still not got it!
Yes but if you have 2 beefcakes, one who cant be arsed and the other one is in the zone.
Whilst the one who cant really be arsed will be helping a bit he is not working to his full potential so you dont gain double the output.
Or a better example is Sir Chris Hoy and me on a tandem, i would help a bit but it wouldnt be the same as haveing 2 x Chris Hoy's pedaling in
unison would it.
I know it will be like poo off astick with 2 engines in it but i cant help thinking there is going to be a lot of lost power.
What would be the outcome if one of the engines went down or began struggling could the other one damage it by 'forcing' it along?
I think its not an issue myself. One engine, when revving under load, will raise its revs (ie accelerate the car) at a certain rate. The other engine
will definately assist even if it was underpowered, because to actually be a hinderance it would have to raise its own revs slower than the engine
that is pulling hard. This is never going to happen because in this situation the engine is doing no work so the revs would rise at the same rate as
it would if it were in neutral - ie fast.
Or another way, it will always be able to add something even if completely strangled.
Please say if that doesnt make sense because i know another way to explain it.
more simply maybe, if you engaged both engines and accelerated, dipping the clutch on just one would cause the revs in that engine to shoot up faster than the engine that is under load - proving that it was producing more power than it was using in being turned.
quote:
Originally posted by Guinness
Nice one! Straight eight!
Same technique as Russ used on the Furore? His seemed to go well!
Mike
isn't it about load? Meaning, if one engine is putting out more power then there's less load on the other and the latter can spin up
quicker until it puts it's power to the jack shaft?
The ideal would be two perfectly matched engines, but I would assume that's almost impossible. This, at least, gives the combined power of both
even if one is slightly down on the other?
Why is this problem fundamentally any different to tuning just one engine?...all the pistons are connected by the crank and have to run together at
the same speed but some will be driving the crank with more force than others?...effectively this just makes a kind of straight 8 engine (as somebody
said earlier)
Alan
quote:
Originally posted by Alan B
Why is this problem fundamentally any different to tuning just one engine?...all the pistons are connected by the crank and have to run together at the same speed but some will be driving the crank with more force than others?...effectively this just makes a kind of straight 8 engine (as somebody said earlier)
Alan
What happens in the event of some sort of shift failure on only one engine?
quote:
Originally posted by Tralfaz
What happens in the event of some sort of shift failure on only one engine?
quote:
Originally posted by CraigJ
quote:
Originally posted by Tralfaz
What happens in the event of some sort of shift failure on only one engine?
Swap the engine for another.
quote:
Originally posted by Tralfaz
quote:
Originally posted by CraigJ
quote:
Originally posted by Tralfaz
What happens in the event of some sort of shift failure on only one engine?
Swap the engine for another.
Ok.
Perhaps I was unclear?
What would the implication/result be of an upshift failure on only one engine while accelerating full out?
One engine shifts to fourth, the other misses, ends up in neutral or stays in third. Say to a linkage problem, or other.
Disaster?
Honestly just curious of the possible result.
T
That's how Tiff Needel lunched the 0-60 record holder car isn't it? Was it a Tiger or something?
It has (had?) two gear shifters side by side and he missed one of them... result was one shifted up and the other over revved and went pop. Rod
through the block if I recall.
Oops.
quote:
Originally posted by andyd
That's how Tiff Needel lunched the 0-60 record holder car isn't it? Was it a Tiger or something?
It has (had?) two gear shifters side by side and he missed one of them... result was one shifted up and the other over revved and went pop. Rod through the block if I recall.
Oops.
You could probably hook up some form of rev-limiter ignition kill/retard device so it worked on both engines. ie, one engine over-revs, then both hit
ignition cut simultaneously.
Heck, with a bit of thought you might even be able to run them off a single ECU as an eight cylinder -- though I'm not sure to what benefit.
Cool car BTW
t
One shifter and 2 cables will be used with the option to un-hook the cable at the engine. also a rev limiter will be fitted for safety.
It's Official Craig me owd fruit - you're mental
Don't forget where I live when comes to a test drive!
Cheers
Chris
I think the best approach is to have the limiter working on both, and to have one gear lever that changes both but a smaller lever somewhere that just changes the one engine, to be used to put them back into the same gear if they end up out.
Separate rev limiters won't help. Imagine driving down the road and accidently putting your car in first gear. The rev-limiter will shut off fuel and/or spark, but the road speed of the car back-drives the engine to about 23,000 rpm. No hope to save it when that happens.
you need a clutch that will automatically engage to protect the engine and hope the gearbox doesn't go bang.
(or better still a clutch on the jack shaft)