Quench on a Turbo?

bookworm007

Well-known member
I know that on a N/A engine you want the smallest quench you can get away with before valves and pistons try to occupy the same space. But I remeber hearing that on turbo motors you really don't have to worry about it. I read that Quench increases the turbulence in the combustion chamber thus making the fuel air mixture burn better. So does a turbo creat enough turbulence in the chamber that the quench effect is unneeded?
 
Thank you for that article it was a great read and better yet I understood it all! :D Well now its time to research a combo that can give a smaller quench without high compression hopefully
 
From a relative standpoint, the only way to get good quench with low cr is to have a relatively large combustion chamber.
 
A flat top piston with a "D" shape pocket at zero or deck plus .008 ". Pocket shape and location should mirror the combustion chamber it faces. Volume of pocket will dictate CR. Common practice, on low compression engines.
 
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