Joe Handley Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 BTW, you guys ever see what an acetylene tank will do to a car http://www.google.com/search?q=acetylene+explosion+in+car&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=I_HoUau-KuXEyQHdv4DACg&sqi=2&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAQ&biw=1280&bih=641
Blown03SVT Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 BTW, you guys ever see what an acetylene tank will do to a car http://www.google.com/search?q=acetylene+explosion+in+car&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=I_HoUau-KuXEyQHdv4DACg&sqi=2&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAQ&biw=1280&bih=641 Best looking Cavalier I have ever seen, I am diggin the lambo doors
mistermodel Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Today's News Poll: 245 viewers heard about this Mustang today. according to the thread about brands ,these must of been the last 245 people to hear of ford. wouldn't there have to a flame or maybe a spark to get n20 to "blow"? Would a spark even be flammable
MachinistMark Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 N2o is NOT flammable! It is an OXIDIZER! The "explosion" in question of that mustang would have involved no flame, but a very very rapid expansion of gas in a confined space
Blown03SVT Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Easiest way to interpret what happened is airing up a bicycle tire until it explodes. Only some much pressure can be contained based on the expansion of the gas. Once that threshold has been passed...BOOM. The high temps insode the car caused the n2o to expand past the designed pressure limits of the n2o bottle.
mistermodel Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 (edited) Mark,Eric I understand all that and I know that the bottle is under pressure. The volume of the car is much larger so a leak or pressure release wouldn't fill the car to the point of expansion .Id say the bleed off valve on the tank didn't do its job and then the tank exploded Edited July 19, 2013 by mistermodel
Ace-Garageguy Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 (edited) N2o is NOT flammable! It is an OXIDIZER! The "explosion" in question of that mustang would have involved no flame, but a very very rapid expansion of gas in a confined space Mark is absolutely right. There is an unfortunate and widespread misconception that nitrous oxide is some kind of mystery, highly volatile and explosive "super fuel", when in fact it's only an oxidizer, as Mark states. The oxidizer in the air we (and your engine) breathe is oxygen, obviously, and it's available freely from the atmosphere to combine with fuel to produce familiar 'combustion', or 'burning'. Combustion (or burning) is the common name for rapid-oxidation, when a fuel AND an oxidizer COMBINE quickly. Nitrous oxide is a stable and easily handled source of additional oxygen to act as an "oxidizer" inside an internal combustion engine, but the oxygen is chemically bound to nitrogen, and is inert and stable until heated to over 500deg. F (which occurs inside the operating engine), when the chemical bond breaks and the free oxygen becomes available for combustion. Additional fuel has to be provided to the engine along with the nitrous "shot" to be available to combine with this extra oxygen. Nitrous with no extra fuel does nothing, because it's NOT a fuel. Nitrous oxide / supplemental-fuel-enrichment injection is simply a way to overcome the physical pumping limitations of an internal combustion engine and FORCE more fuel and oxygen into the engine than would otherwise be available (in a way, similar to what supercharging does, but by a different method) and the extra fuel and oxygen produce more power when they combine, inside the engine, during combustion. Edited July 19, 2013 by Ace-Garageguy
Blown03SVT Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Nitrous with no extra fuel makes melted pistons...
MachinistMark Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Thank you bill for that. Fully plan to run a fogger system and a plate shot on the small block I'm putting together. And like I've previously stated either a faulty, or worst case completely missing pop off valve is the only real possible culprit
Ace-Garageguy Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Nitrous with no extra fuel makes melted pistons... Yup, from running excessively lean.
Dragfreak Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 (edited) Mark is absolutely right. There is an unfortunate and widespread misconception that nitrous oxide is some kind of mystery, highly volatile and explosive "super fuel", when in fact it's only an oxidizer, as Mark states. The oxidizer in the air we (and your engine) breathe is oxygen, obviously, and it's available freely from the atmosphere to combine with fuel to produce familiar 'combustion', or 'burning'. Combustion (or burning) is the common name for rapid-oxidation, when a fuel AND an oxidizer COMBINE quickly. Nitrous oxide is a stable and easily handled source of additional oxygen to act as an "oxidizer" inside an internal combustion engine, but the oxygen is chemically bound to nitrogen, and is inert and stable until heated to over 500deg. F (which occurs inside the operating engine), when the chemical bond breaks and the free oxygen becomes available for combustion. Additional fuel has to be provided to the engine along with the nitrous "shot" to be available to combine with this extra oxygen. Nitrous with no extra fuel does nothing, because it's NOT a fuel. Nitrous oxide / supplemental-fuel-enrichment injection is simply a way to overcome the physical pumping limitations of an internal combustion engine and FORCE more fuel and oxygen into the engine than would otherwise be available (in a way, similar to what supercharging does, but by a different method) and the extra fuel and oxygen produce more power when they combine, inside the engine, during combustion. But if you are running nitrous and you aren't adding more fuel the engine can run lean and a lot of things can happen, burnt pistons/melted pistons, melting valves and much more Edited July 19, 2013 by Dragfreak
Dragfreak Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Nitrous with no extra fuel makes melted pistons... just realized you said this right before I just said the same thing...
MachinistMark Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 I get a rise out of the folks who act like running lean is only dangerous running nitrous... Turbos or superchargers do exactly the same thing as nitrous does - more air in. Run lean under boost and your gonna have a bad time. Hell run lean ANY time and your gonna have a bad time.
Blown03SVT Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 My 1:1 toy is factory supercharged, and the blower over spun with a smaller pulley to the tune of about 16lbs of boost. I agree Mark, proper tuning is very important
MachinistMark Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Lean = death. Lean it out and your gonna blow your junk UP! Like I said I'm planning on a plate and fogger system on my mill, 250-300 fogger shot and a 100 shot on the plate
Guest Johnny Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 My 1:1 toy is factory supercharged, and the blower over spun with a smaller pulley to the tune of about 16lbs of boost. I agree Mark, proper tuning is very important Ever seen a block bust in one of those cars? Not pretty thing to see.
Guest Johnny Posted July 19, 2013 Posted July 19, 2013 Lean = death. Lean it out and your gonna blow your junk UP! Like I said I'm planning on a plate and fogger system on my mill, 250-300 fogger shot and a 100 shot on the plate I can't count the number of times you see that at test and tune! Just about the 100ft mark, boom!
Longbox55 Posted July 20, 2013 Posted July 20, 2013 Actually NOS is an energy drink, formerly endorsed by "shrub" Busch. He's plugging for Monster this season.
JunkPile Posted July 20, 2013 Posted July 20, 2013 I've got an old and tired Quadrajet on a driver of mine. It has no problems with running way to rich
Joe Handley Posted July 20, 2013 Posted July 20, 2013 (edited) BTW, you guys ever see what an acetylene tank will do to a car http://www.google.com/search?q=acetylene+explosion+in+car&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=I_HoUau-KuXEyQHdv4DACg&sqi=2&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAQ&biw=1280&bih=641 Best looking Cavalier I have ever seen, I am diggin the lambo doors Um, I think those might be the roof......and maybe the quarter panels too Edited July 20, 2013 by Joe Handley
martinfan5 Posted July 20, 2013 Author Posted July 20, 2013 Yep, clearly the roof/rear quarter panels, the drivers door is horizontal like it should be
Blown03SVT Posted July 20, 2013 Posted July 20, 2013 Ever seen a block bust in one of those cars? Not pretty thing to see. Nope, in the almost 10 years of playing with 4v Ford motors never seen one split. The old 302 small blocks I have seen split through the lifter valley and along the mains like a watermelon.
MachinistMark Posted July 21, 2013 Posted July 21, 2013 302 s north of 500 HP living on borrowed time. Couldn't split one better with a band saw
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now