RV8/supercharged intake manifold keeps blowing up, why?
Posted: Sun Dec 02, 2007 4:59 pm
I've got a 4.6 RV8 with a M112 supercharger fitted using a custom manifold. There are some pictures here:
http://www.tvrsseries.com/sowners/greenv8s/greenv8s.htm
The basic layout is a throttle upstream of the blower, quite a long manifold leading to a plenum feeding all eight cylinders via very short ports, port injection (but very close to the top of the ports), wasted spark ignition, vacuum operated recirc valve takes the load off the blower when the throttle is closed.
There are a couple of teething problems with it, but the most worrying problem is that from time to time the intake manifold seems to light up, which gets quite exciting.
Opening the throttle suddenly from idle can be enough to do it; sometimes it happens much higher up the rev range after the engine has been on full boost for a couple of seconds.
The symptoms are that the engine completely dies (no power output at all). In gear there is a lot of engine braking; out of gear the engine spins down very quickly indeed. The blower drive belt squeals like a pig (it's quite tight so that implies there is a massive load on the blower), boost goes off the dial, masses of smoke from every orifice around the engine. I think what's happening is that the charge is burning in the intake manifold. Closing the throttle stops it after a second or so, the engine knocks like mad for another couple of seconds and then (assuming it hasn't stalled by now) starts running normally again.
I'm running wasted spark now, but I also had the problem when it was running on a distributor. I'm running a very short period 'supercharger' grind cam now, but previously I was running a kent 214 fast road cam and had the same problem. It's got a static CR of about 9:1 now, but previously it was up at 10.5:1. I have water injection, it doesn't seem to make any difference to this problem.
Anyone seen a problem like this before? I can see how there might be enough fuel and pressure in the manifold to sustain a flame, but puzzled that this is not a more widespread problem if it's that easy to light. I'm only running 7 psi boost, which doesn't seem much in the scheme of things.
http://www.tvrsseries.com/sowners/greenv8s/greenv8s.htm
The basic layout is a throttle upstream of the blower, quite a long manifold leading to a plenum feeding all eight cylinders via very short ports, port injection (but very close to the top of the ports), wasted spark ignition, vacuum operated recirc valve takes the load off the blower when the throttle is closed.
There are a couple of teething problems with it, but the most worrying problem is that from time to time the intake manifold seems to light up, which gets quite exciting.
Opening the throttle suddenly from idle can be enough to do it; sometimes it happens much higher up the rev range after the engine has been on full boost for a couple of seconds.
The symptoms are that the engine completely dies (no power output at all). In gear there is a lot of engine braking; out of gear the engine spins down very quickly indeed. The blower drive belt squeals like a pig (it's quite tight so that implies there is a massive load on the blower), boost goes off the dial, masses of smoke from every orifice around the engine. I think what's happening is that the charge is burning in the intake manifold. Closing the throttle stops it after a second or so, the engine knocks like mad for another couple of seconds and then (assuming it hasn't stalled by now) starts running normally again.
I'm running wasted spark now, but I also had the problem when it was running on a distributor. I'm running a very short period 'supercharger' grind cam now, but previously I was running a kent 214 fast road cam and had the same problem. It's got a static CR of about 9:1 now, but previously it was up at 10.5:1. I have water injection, it doesn't seem to make any difference to this problem.
Anyone seen a problem like this before? I can see how there might be enough fuel and pressure in the manifold to sustain a flame, but puzzled that this is not a more widespread problem if it's that easy to light. I'm only running 7 psi boost, which doesn't seem much in the scheme of things.