Can that happen?..
Can that happen?..
Author
Discussion

veryoldfart

Original Poster:

1,739 posts

226 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
ref the picture/painting of Dennis Priddles Chrysler Avenger AAFC, can two adjacent cylinders be alight at the same time?....

just wondered.....dont hit me

(painting as per ED of course, im not putting a link up cos i love my kneecaps)....lol

Edited by veryoldfart on Thursday 14th April 16:05

fergywales

1,624 posts

215 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2

chris89

165 posts

191 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
my understanding is that the firing order on a v8 is 18436572.

in the picture it has cylinders 5 and 7 going together, which are together in the firing stroke. If the picture was taken from a photo where the camera had a relativly slow shutter speed then this effect could be possible.

No doubt someone will come and tell me I have this wrong, but in the mean time I hope this helps

chris

Edited by chris89 on Thursday 14th April 12:02

Mod Edit - Sorry chap, no signatures


Edited by Slinky on Thursday 14th April 12:15

fergywales

1,624 posts

215 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
Not wrong chris, however, you'd struggle to find a car running nitro that still runs that firing order, 4/7 & 2/3 swaps being the order of the day (4/7 = 1-8-7-3-6-5-4-2 and 4/7&2/3 = 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3) now that setback blowers have changed the characteristics of how the fuel enters the manifold.

veryoldfart

Original Poster:

1,739 posts

226 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
fergywales said:
1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2
that could be the firing order but even i know you cant have two firing at the same time!

fergywales

1,624 posts

215 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
veryoldfart said:
that could be the firing order but even i know you cant have two firing at the same time!
Take RPM into consideration there old fella. rolleyes

Perhaps have a look at some of the slo-mo burnout videos posted around the internet of cars burning out, much easier to see what is going on when a cylinder is dropped.

Modernpics

125 posts

219 months

Thursday 14th April 2011
quotequote all
Ahem!


Nitromethane is pretty slow burning so its possible to get images of both banks lit with out any great difficulty

Edited by Modernpics on Thursday 14th April 18:21

veryoldfart

Original Poster:

1,739 posts

226 months

Friday 15th April 2011
quotequote all
fergywales said:
Take RPM into consideration there old fella. rolleyes

Perhaps have a look at some of the slo-mo burnout videos posted around the internet of cars burning out, much easier to see what is going on when a cylinder is dropped.
I agree, PLUS, back then, the cars were (seemingly) revving lower on higher % of nitro (and were noiser i reckon), ive looked at the slo-mo vids on youtube and they are pretty inconclusive (big scrabble score for that), so its one for artistic licence maybe....

martyn b

50 posts

209 months

Saturday 16th April 2011
quotequote all
cliff gould said:
does he run a boat cam?
I thought boat cams were reserved for Jags (aka boat anchors)... [Sorry Sid, just kidding wink ]