It's water pressure used on a flowbench to determine amount of air on an
intake system or the other way on an exhaust system. If you get down and
dirty and start measuring airflow through valves duration of opening and
size of cylinder you can use the numbers to determine efficiency and power
of an engine modification(s). When you went to visit Bruce, he should have
shown you his machine that he uses to build TB's. It's the principle behind
that machine. Auto manufacturers use these machines on a much larger scale
to engineer the engines themselves.
Ron
00 SLT QC 4X2 5.9 46RE 3.92 LSD
For modifications see my DML Profile
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@buffnet.net
[mailto:owner-dakota-truck@buffnet.net]On Behalf Of Steven St.Laurent
Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2000 5:02 PM
To: dakota-truck@buffnet.net
Subject: DML: RE: RE: Re: Holley TB Update - WOW!
25 inches of water?
---------------------------------------------------
Steve St.Laurent
2000 Dakota 4.7L, CC, Soon to be Supercharged
1999 Chebby gone in 2003
1993 Suzuki Tracker (Geo) 1.6L
COMING SOON
2003 Aspiring for a V-10 GTS-R
2003 Dodge Dakota 5.7 Hemi R/T
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@buffnet.net
[mailto:owner-dakota-truck@buffnet.net]On Behalf Of Bernd D. Ratsch
Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2000 4:39 PM
To: dakota-truck@buffnet.net
Subject: DML: RE: Re: Holley TB Update - WOW!
Flowbench measurement: 25" H2O
- Bernd
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@buffnet.net
Subject: DML: RE: RE: Re: Holley TB Update - WOW!
For us non-automotive engineers, speak English. What does it mean from 28"
or 25"?
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