Mallard said:the rod blew so it must have been the hottest
The reason it was mentioned is since no one here will do what really is necessary, like a 4 channel egt monitor, then the hottest known cylinder should be monitored. (rei)
Mallard said:the rod blew so it must have been the hottest
what I'm tellin you is saying the rod blew because that cylinder was the hottest is not necessarily true. Many things effect the cylinder temperatures, not just a/f. That's why you don't use an egt to tune a/f. IMO you would want to put the thermocouple in the cylinder runner that should be the hottest according to engineering principals. That would be 2 or 3. As I've stated a couple times already, cylinder 2 and 3 will not have the heat lost to convection and radiation that 1 and 4 will have. They will also absorb some of the heat from the bordering cylinders.Pirana said:The reason it was mentioned is since no one here will do what really is necessary, like a 4 channel egt monitor, then the hottest known cylinder should be monitored. (rei)
Mallard said:what I'm tellin you is saying the rod blew because that cylinder was the hottest is not necessarily true. Many things effect the cylinder temperatures, not just a/f. That's why you don't use an egt to tune a/f. IMO you would want to put the thermocouple in the cylinder runner that should be the hottest according to engineering principals. That would be 2 or 3. As I've stated a couple times already, cylinder 2 and 3 will not have the heat lost to convection and radiation that 1 and 4 will have. They will also absorb some of the heat from the bordering cylinders.
That's exactly what I've been saying. I think you mis-interpreted what I said. Go read all my posts in this thread and you'll see I've been saying that the EGT's main responsibility is to save you from melting a valve, and that's why you want it as close to the head as you can put it.Brian MP5T said:(hand)
You Don't use an EGT "Only to tune A/F"
It's a good indicator, however you use it with a Wideband O2.
The More the better...
Besides, knowing how hot the combustion is is good info for saving your motor from a melted piston or a cooked valve..
Brian MP5T said:It's rather far but sits around 1200 F with the DEI Wrap at 120 Km/h constant...
Bigg Tim said:When do you see the 1200 degree's? I see those temps when I boost hard. I'm normally aroun 900-1000 degrees while driving normally, and that's with the probe after the turbo. I was told to add 200 or so degrees to get the temp before the turbo.