Superchargers and Sequentials

Superchargers and Sequentials

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Ballistic Banana

Original Poster:

14,698 posts

267 months

Tuesday 17th February 2004
quotequote all
Just been reading the article in this months Evo for about the 5th time:
The new TVR Typhoo is to have a supercharger.
Can anyone explain to me in Layman Terms how a Supercharger works, where its likely to sit on the 4ltr S6, on the pic on page 70 could you point it out.

Also, I know that The Typhoo sequential Box is still in Developement, and quite alot of other vehicles have them, Been told before but cant remeber how it works.

TIA

BB

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 17th February 2004
quotequote all
This might give you a bit of background http://auto.howstuffworks.com/question122.htm

Basically, the supercharger compresses air being fed into the engine using a turbine driven by the engine. This is usually going to mean that it will be driven by a belt from the cam and therefore be mounted somewhere near the other belt driven ancilliaries like water pump, etc.

wedg1e

26,803 posts

265 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
Sequential boxes have been used on motorbikes for years: instead of a set of rails with forks attached, which allow you to swap from any gear to any other (in effect), on a (bike) sequential there's a drum with grooves machined into it. The up/ down shift is spring-biased to the centre; every up or down action turns the drum by a number of degrees that causes the selector forks (which are located in the drum grooves by pegs) to move as necessary to select the appropriate gear. One of the nice things on a bike is making clutchless changes; drag bikes tend to have air shifters to make the changes even quicker. I suppose you could do it on a car, too.....

Ian

flooritforever

861 posts

243 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
Ballistic Banana said:
The new TVR Typhoo is....


Surely this ain't right? You do mean Typhoon don't you? I doubt TVR would name a car after a cup of tea.

WilliamBall

4,270 posts

282 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
wedg1e said:
on a (bike) sequential there's a drum with grooves machined into it. The up/ down shift is spring-biased to the centre; every up or down action turns the drum by a number of degrees that causes the selector forks (which are located in the drum grooves by pegs) to move as necessary to select the appropriate gear


[pedantic]...apart from on some pre-unit gearboxes like norton/villiers, where the fork pegs ran in grooves on a flat disk mounted at right angles to the shafts. The gearchange then moved the disk a number of degrees...[/pedantic]

WB

Julian64

14,317 posts

254 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
LexSport said:
This might give you a bit of background http://auto.howstuffworks.com/question122.htm

Basically, the supercharger compresses air being fed into the engine using a turbine driven by the engine. This is usually going to mean that it will be driven by a belt from the cam and therefore be mounted somewhere near the other belt driven ancilliaries like water pump, etc.


Didn't think there were any turbines in a supercharger. The only one I've taken apart had what looked like two giant cogwheels with a small gap in between which was the space the air occupied.

Do you have any links to a description of a working turbine supercharger as I would be very interested to see. (I'm building a jet engine from scratch and am getting morbidly fascinated by their use)

Alpineandy

1,395 posts

243 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
Julian64 said:

Didn't think there were any turbines in a supercharger. The only one I've taken apart had what looked like two giant cogwheels with a small gap in between which was the space the air occupied.

Do you have any links to a description of a working turbine supercharger as I would be very interested to see. (I'm building a jet engine from scratch and am getting morbidly fascinated by their use)



There are a number of different styles/types of supercharger. I think the one you opened up is refered to as a rootes type, but there's also a screw type and rotor type that I know of. I think there's an article in 'retro cars' magazine this month. Quite an interesting Mag.

>> Edited by Alpineandy on Thursday 19th February 10:12

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
Julian64 said:

Didn't think there were any turbines in a supercharger. The only one I've taken apart had what looked like two giant cogwheels with a small gap in between which was the space the air occupied.

Do you have any links to a description of a working turbine supercharger as I would be very interested to see. (I'm building a jet engine from scratch and am getting morbidly fascinated by their use)

A quick search on the web threw this up: www.superchargeronline.com/content.asp?ID=15

The rest of the site looks like it might be worth a read to get the background.

As for the Jet Engine - very cool. I spent pretty much an entire day glued to Discovery H&L over Christmas watching a series building a scale jet transport aircraft. Very sad I know, but fascinating none the less.

greenv8s

30,195 posts

284 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
The one you've looked at is a positive displacement type. Vortex and others are based on a different approach using a mechanically driven turbine. This gives less low-down boost but is also more efficient, and they are physically smaller and easier to package.

Frik

13,542 posts

243 months

Wednesday 18th February 2004
quotequote all
flooritforever said:

Ballistic Banana said:
The new TVR Typhoo is....



Surely this ain't right? You do mean Typhoon don't you? I doubt TVR would name a car after a cup of tea.


Shouldn't that be a Typhon?

Julian64

14,317 posts

254 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
LexSport said:

Julian64 said:

Didn't think there were any turbines in a supercharger. The only one I've taken apart had what looked like two giant cogwheels with a small gap in between which was the space the air occupied.

Do you have any links to a description of a working turbine supercharger as I would be very interested to see. (I'm building a jet engine from scratch and am getting morbidly fascinated by their use)


A quick search on the web threw this up: www.superchargeronline.com/content.asp?ID=15

The rest of the site looks like it might be worth a read to get the background.

As for the Jet Engine - very cool. I spent pretty much an entire day glued to Discovery H&L over Christmas watching a series building a scale jet transport aircraft. Very sad I know, but fascinating none the less.


good site, thanks

VYT

584 posts

262 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
Julian64 said:


Didn't think there were any turbines in a supercharger. The only one I've taken apart had what looked like two giant cogwheels with a small gap in between which was the space the air occupied.

Do you have any links to a description of a working turbine supercharger as I would be very interested to see. (I'm building a jet engine from scratch and am getting morbidly fascinated by their use)


Rolls Royce Merlin used a crank driven turbine supercharger if I remember correcly

Ballistic Banana

Original Poster:

14,698 posts

267 months

Thursday 19th February 2004
quotequote all
Thanks guys, kinda sheds some light, that website above/below How stuff works is very interesting, TA.

Nope its a Typhoo In my eyes

V6GTO

11,579 posts

242 months

Saturday 21st February 2004
quotequote all
So just how noisy is a dox in a car? If they are quiet in bikes why not the car. Every time I say I'd love one in my Noble all I ever get is " Too loud " "You would'nt want it on the road " etc.

V6GTO

11,579 posts

242 months

Saturday 21st February 2004
quotequote all
For dox read Dog box!

GreenV8S

30,195 posts

284 months

Sunday 22nd February 2004
quotequote all
Dog box needn't be any noisier than a normal synchro box, the gears are the same. But it feels very different to drive and needs a different gear change technique, and I understand they wear out relatively quickly.

djdicker

26 posts

284 months

Monday 23rd February 2004
quotequote all
Most dog boxes have straight cut gears. Synchro boxes almost always have helical cut gears. Its the straight cut gears that make nearly all the noise. Also a racing box has slide on gears and these rattle around. Synchro boxes don't normally have these either. Quaife make Sequential boxes with either straight or helical cut gears.

WilliamBall

4,270 posts

282 months

Monday 23rd February 2004
quotequote all
...and in a bike dog box all the gears [all straight cut] are in constant mesh. And of course no syncro. Running and bike, and having run a bike engined car, it certainly livable with - but clunky compared with a car box. Great on bikes, and cars on track days. Not so great in te BEC in traffic.

WB