g3teg97
Super Moderator
There's been a lot of threads going around about turbo's. I want to keep this thread to be an informative one, so that people that don't know that much about turbo's can come here and get started.
**DO NOT POST COMMENTS IN THIS THREAD. ONLY POST LINKS/ANSWERS TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE THREAD AND THE TOPIC**
A turbocharger is an exhaust gas-driven compressor used to increase the power output of an internal-combustion engine by increasing the amount of oxygen entering the engine by compressing air that is entering the engine. A key advantage of turbochargers is that they offer a considerable increase in engine power with only a slight increase in weight.
Principle of operation
A turbocharger is a dynamic compressor, in which air or gas is compressed by the mechanical action of impellers, vaned rotors which are spun using the kinetic movement of air, imparting velocity and pressure to the flowing medium.
The mechanical concept turbocharger revolves around three main parts, two of which being impellers, one impeller being driven by the rush of exiting exhaust gas from a pump, most often times an internal combustion engine, to spin a second impeller whose function is to force more air into the pumps intake, or air supply. The third basic part is a center section which isolates and contains a shaft that directly connects the two impellers, which rotate at speeds in the tens and sometimes hundreds of thousands of revolutions per minute.
The impellers are each individually contained within a housing. By spinning at a relatively high rate of speed the compressor turbine draws in a large volume of air and forces it into the engine, where resistance to air flow causes it to compress within the sealed confines of the intake system. The speed at which the shaft and impellers (referred generally to as the "turbo") spin is directly proportional to the pressure of the compressed air. Since a turbo will spin to rpms far beyond what is needed or of what it is mechanically capable of, the speed must be controlled, and thus is also the property used to set the desired compression pressure.
The implementation of a turbocharger is to improve upon the size to output efficiency of an engine by solving for one of its cardinal limitations. For example, an automobile engine uses the downward stroke of a piston to create an area of low pressure in order to draw air into the cylinder. Since the number of air and fuel molecules determine the potential energy available to force the piston down on the combustion stroke, and because of the relatively constant pressure of the atmosphere, there ultimately will be a limit to the amount of air and consequently fuel filling the combustion chamber. Since the turbocharger increases the pressure at the point where air is entering the cylinder, and the amount of air brought into the cylinder is largely a function of time and pressure, more air will be drawn in as the pressure increases. The intake pressure, in the absence of the turbocharger determined by the atmosphere, can with the turbocharger be controllably increased.
The application of a compressor to increase pressure at the point of cylinder air intake is often referred to as forced induction. Centrifugal superchargers operate in the same fashion as a turbo, however the energy to spin the compressor is taken from the rotating output energy of the engines crankshaft as opposed to exhaust gas. For this reason turbochargers are ideally more efficient, as the energy from the velocity of the exhaust gas would otherwise be wasted; superchargers use output energy to achieve a net gain, which is at the expense of some of the engines total output.
**DO NOT POST COMMENTS IN THIS THREAD. ONLY POST LINKS/ANSWERS TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE THREAD AND THE TOPIC**
A turbocharger is an exhaust gas-driven compressor used to increase the power output of an internal-combustion engine by increasing the amount of oxygen entering the engine by compressing air that is entering the engine. A key advantage of turbochargers is that they offer a considerable increase in engine power with only a slight increase in weight.
Principle of operation
A turbocharger is a dynamic compressor, in which air or gas is compressed by the mechanical action of impellers, vaned rotors which are spun using the kinetic movement of air, imparting velocity and pressure to the flowing medium.
The mechanical concept turbocharger revolves around three main parts, two of which being impellers, one impeller being driven by the rush of exiting exhaust gas from a pump, most often times an internal combustion engine, to spin a second impeller whose function is to force more air into the pumps intake, or air supply. The third basic part is a center section which isolates and contains a shaft that directly connects the two impellers, which rotate at speeds in the tens and sometimes hundreds of thousands of revolutions per minute.
The impellers are each individually contained within a housing. By spinning at a relatively high rate of speed the compressor turbine draws in a large volume of air and forces it into the engine, where resistance to air flow causes it to compress within the sealed confines of the intake system. The speed at which the shaft and impellers (referred generally to as the "turbo") spin is directly proportional to the pressure of the compressed air. Since a turbo will spin to rpms far beyond what is needed or of what it is mechanically capable of, the speed must be controlled, and thus is also the property used to set the desired compression pressure.
The implementation of a turbocharger is to improve upon the size to output efficiency of an engine by solving for one of its cardinal limitations. For example, an automobile engine uses the downward stroke of a piston to create an area of low pressure in order to draw air into the cylinder. Since the number of air and fuel molecules determine the potential energy available to force the piston down on the combustion stroke, and because of the relatively constant pressure of the atmosphere, there ultimately will be a limit to the amount of air and consequently fuel filling the combustion chamber. Since the turbocharger increases the pressure at the point where air is entering the cylinder, and the amount of air brought into the cylinder is largely a function of time and pressure, more air will be drawn in as the pressure increases. The intake pressure, in the absence of the turbocharger determined by the atmosphere, can with the turbocharger be controllably increased.
The application of a compressor to increase pressure at the point of cylinder air intake is often referred to as forced induction. Centrifugal superchargers operate in the same fashion as a turbo, however the energy to spin the compressor is taken from the rotating output energy of the engines crankshaft as opposed to exhaust gas. For this reason turbochargers are ideally more efficient, as the energy from the velocity of the exhaust gas would otherwise be wasted; superchargers use output energy to achieve a net gain, which is at the expense of some of the engines total output.
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