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Author: Subject: engine valve technologoy
02GF74

posted on 20/9/06 at 08:17 AM Reply With Quote
engine valve technologoy

are the engines using non cam activated valves e.g. electromagnetically operated valves?

if noit, then why not?

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nick205

posted on 20/9/06 at 08:26 AM Reply With Quote
I seem to remember reading about BMW doing some development with different methods of valve actuation and possibly Honda too. I'm not aware of any production engines with alternative technology yet though.

Makes perfect sesne to me provided the reliability, weight and performance criteris can be met. It would free engine designers to look at different shapes and positions for valves and would presumably allow infinitely variable valve timing over the rev range - like vtec/vvc, but better.

A lnog time before it would reach the likes of us though

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matt_claydon

posted on 20/9/06 at 08:31 AM Reply With Quote
A friend of mine did a project on this at uni - they got a single cylinder bike engine running with solenoid operated valves. Don't know if it's been looked at by any of the big manufacturers - I'd be very surprised if they aren't working on it though.
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nib1980

posted on 20/9/06 at 08:34 AM Reply With Quote
Most of the technologies require 24volt sytems, and most OEMs like mine won't swap over to the higher voltage.
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02GF74

posted on 20/9/06 at 08:48 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by nib1980
Most of the technologies require 24volt sytems, and most OEMs like mine won't swap over to the higher voltage.


that' interesting .... I reads a few years back that car electric will be standardised to be 48 V - reson being with all the electrical gubbins fitted, the weight of the loom is quite significant; higher voltage means thinner wires.

It would be interesting project to diy proviing there was some fialsfe to prevent valve hitting piston head.

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martyn_16v

posted on 20/9/06 at 08:53 AM Reply With Quote
I'd expect to see it in F1 before it got anywhere else. The problem is developing solenoids that are able to actuate against the high cylinder pressures, cycle at the required speed, and still maintain accurate valve position. It'd take some seriously powerful magnets to provide all that, I don't know if the materials are available yet to do so.
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clockwork

posted on 20/9/06 at 09:24 AM Reply With Quote
What nib said.

Valeo is pioneering such a system.

One of the other benefits that is not widely publicised is the ability to utilise the engine as a braking mechanism with electromagnetic valves this becomes easy.
Brake dust is actually very bad for your health and an environmental problem.

EDITED: I would be surprised to see it on F1 cars due to the weight, and speed implications. 19000+ rpm is a lot more opening and closing per minute than 6000. You may be right though, it would certainly prove its reliability if it worked in that environment.

[Edited on 20/9/06 by clockwork]

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twybrow

posted on 20/9/06 at 09:34 AM Reply With Quote
The current required to operate them , and the losses experienced are huge. Several companies have played with the idea over the years, but at present the technology is not suffiently developed.
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02GF74

posted on 20/9/06 at 10:02 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by clockwork

EDITED: I would be surprised to see it on F1 cars due to the weight, and speed implications. 19000+ rpm is a lot more opening and closing per minute than 6000. You may be right though, it would certainly prove its reliability if it worked in that environment.

[Edited on 20/9/06 by clockwork]


Pretty sure I heard the renaulr had them in an F1 car but they were pneumatically operated.

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UncleFista

posted on 20/9/06 at 10:43 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by 02GF74
Pretty sure I heard the renaulr had them in an F1 car but they were pneumatically operated.


Peugeot were running pneumatic valvegear in F1 over a decade ago, ISTR it wasn't overly reliable





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Peteff

posted on 20/9/06 at 10:50 AM Reply With Quote
Ferrari used it and their reliability isn't an issue

2001 Ferrari V10 with pneumatic valve gear





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I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

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Coose

posted on 20/9/06 at 10:51 AM Reply With Quote
The Suzuki MotoGP bikes have pneumatically operated valves. Not sure how they work though.

Ducati have sued desmodromic valves for lots of years - two followers, where one opens the valve and the other closes it. It reduces valve bounce to an absolute minimum!

I can't understand why rotary valve development seems to have died a death!?!





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NS Dev

posted on 20/9/06 at 11:57 AM Reply With Quote
arggghhhh!!!

Everybody talks about "pneumatically operated valves"

they are NOT pneumatically operated!!

They have pneumatic valve SPRINGS!!!!

This is common to most top level competition engines now, and in VERY basic terms an ECU controls valve spring pressure, minimising it at lower speeds to reduce losses and maximising it at high speeds to prevent bounce. Also removes the problem of natural frequencies.





Retro RWD is the way forward...........automotive fabrication, car restoration, sheetmetal work, engine conversion retro car restoration and tuning

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Richard Quinn

posted on 20/9/06 at 12:07 PM Reply With Quote
Didn't the F1 engines still have cams to open the valves? I thought that they were just closed by pneumatics instead of springs

Sorry, added my reply whilst still on page one of the thread! Still, nice to know that I was correct

[Edited on 20/9/06 by Richard Quinn]

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NS Dev

posted on 20/9/06 at 12:10 PM Reply With Quote
yep, exactly correct!





Retro RWD is the way forward...........automotive fabrication, car restoration, sheetmetal work, engine conversion retro car restoration and tuning

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clockwork

posted on 20/9/06 at 12:33 PM Reply With Quote
Sorry are we talking about pneumatic or electromagnetic?

If electromagnetic, I'm pretty sure nobody is using them. Though a link would prove me wrong.

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Catpuss

posted on 20/9/06 at 06:08 PM Reply With Quote
From what I understand F1 cars use nitrogen instead of the springs. The valves are cam opened as normal, but use a small piston on the follower for pressurisation as the cam goes past the pressure is released and the air pushes the valve shut acting like a spring. As there is not a perfect seal there is a nitrogen remote cylinder to keep the pressure up.

I think they have some sort of spring/friction damping still to damp the opening and avoid the valve decellerating too fast when it reaches fully open.

Here you go :

http://scarbsf1.com/valves.html

Suzuki also experiemented with rotary valves in their bikes in the 60s but I think that was for 2 strokes

I think also Lotus have been looking at solenoid based valves from some time too.

On top of that Mazda have at least one fruity engine with no inlet valves relying on the turbo pressure to keep the gasses escaping.

[Edited on 20/9/06 by Catpuss]

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gazza285

posted on 20/9/06 at 07:40 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Coose
I can't understand why rotary valve development seems to have died a death!?!




Because the cylinder pressures are acting on the rotating valve as it turns. When the mixture is ignited the pressures are huge, and you have still got a rotating valve in the chamber, the pressure pushes on the valve which makes the mechanical losses high. Sealing the ports is also a major problem as the seals see both high pressures and low pressure vacuums, making the engines inefficient as well.

Guess who worked on a few rotary valve engine prototypes for the Shell Ecomarathon a few years back. Lots of either inefficient running engines, or fairly efficient engine that siezed within minutes. Non of the rotary valve engines came close either way to a poppet valve engine on the dyno for power or efficiency. We binned the lot.





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