As usual this has been discussed before
Getting air to Turbo:
http://www.landracing.com/forum/index.php/topic,3689.0.htmlRamair is a hotly debated subject in the hotrod world. Physicists say it cannot have any effect at the speeds cars can move at. The mass of air behind the column of air going into the intake doesn't have enough force to compress air.
Physicists? Care to quote specific facts? Air is in fact incompressible at LSR speeds. But there is ram air pressure.
Check this out:
http://naca.central.cranfield.ac.uk/reports/1927/naca-report-247.pdfA report on ram air pressure . . . from
1926!The formula is mph
2*0.0000176This gives 0.704 psi at 200 mph. Not much, but without it you not only don't have pressure, you have a partial vacuum at the inlet, NA or turbo.
At a standstill the turbo is pulling a vacuum in the area around the inlet. Using a properly designed inlet to take advantage of the ram air effect makes the turbo more efficient.
Yeah, poor choice of words. I should have said "much effect" instead of "any effect".
It's been a long time since I read anything on ram-air, but IIRC, the gains we see don't line up with the science. That doesn't mean the science is wrong, just that there must be another variable.
Example:
I'm on the dyno earlier this year testing intakes on stock Duramaxes (turbo diesel engine, 2.44" inducer) The hood is open during testing. ~20mph (WAG) air is coming from a fan. Using a Banks intake we did some pulls. It's a ram-air design, and I sealed the intake. When I aimed the airstream towards the inlet, we picked up 8 rwhp over aiming it at the whole front of the truck. No way a small electric fan is measurably pressurizing the intake, and a fan doesn't cool air, in fact, a fan heats the air (electric motor). The result was repeatable and stretched across the RPM band from 2500 to 3500 rpm (our powerband).
Yes, perhaps it's due to the vacuum a charger creates at the inducer (even with an open inlet). But for now, when I'm allowed to use ram-air inlets, I do so. The gains increase at the dragstrip. Most aftermarket intakes for late model GM products do nothing but empty your wallet and make more noise. GM ain't stupid, if they can pickup mileage and power with an intake, they do it, their intakes are very good for OEM. But the aftermarket CAI's that have a true ram-air design will show gains when airflow is present, even at freeway speeds.