I've been wracking my brain for the past two days trying to figure out this damn equation for the reciprocating weight, or oscillating force on the rod bolts:
So let's say I use these rough numbers:
Piston MASS: 310grams = 0.7lbs
Rod MASS: 540grams = 1.2lbs
Stroke: 3.852"
RPM: 6000RPM*2*pi/60
That gets me: 1,555,528 lb-in/second squared
then 129627 lb-ft/s^2
then divide by 32.2 ft/s^2 and I get an oscillating force of 4000 lbs!?! Seems a little light. ARP stated a rough value of 20,000 lbs at the same rpm on a different engine.
ARP states that the oscillating force is PROPORTIONAL to the above calc. So pretty much it's useless and I need to hit up some textbooks and figure it out on my own. Or just multiply it by 4 and hope the prof doesn't notice
Have any thoughts?
So let's say I use these rough numbers:
Piston MASS: 310grams = 0.7lbs
Rod MASS: 540grams = 1.2lbs
Stroke: 3.852"
RPM: 6000RPM*2*pi/60
That gets me: 1,555,528 lb-in/second squared
then 129627 lb-ft/s^2
then divide by 32.2 ft/s^2 and I get an oscillating force of 4000 lbs!?! Seems a little light. ARP stated a rough value of 20,000 lbs at the same rpm on a different engine.
ARP states that the oscillating force is PROPORTIONAL to the above calc. So pretty much it's useless and I need to hit up some textbooks and figure it out on my own. Or just multiply it by 4 and hope the prof doesn't notice
Have any thoughts?