That to me says it takes alot more hp to go faster. Don't think 20hp would be much on an slip.I ran that nylon fan on my car for a while. I removed it at the track one day between passes, it was less than .10 from that fan to no fan at all. I never compared it to another fan.
I have never seen a dyno study on this flexilite fan. There was a mag article some 18 yrs ago I read that said Andy's fan was the worst in the bunch of 8 or 10 fans dyno tested. The blades look to have a 90* bend. That's gonna catch alot of air. I would like to see Andy perform a dyno study on that fan just to see. Would be interesting.Nice project and nice work. The fan in his pic eats a lot of power. If your going to use a mech. fan use this one. I just ordered the 19" to replace it as it will fit my 69 charger schoud that I used in my A body better.
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Weren`t they using a sbc for a test engine ? Torqueless little bastards unless u get into a bigger one. Our bigblocks probly handle the fan better, due to more torque to start with. I cant see 30 h.p. in a fan either, maybe 15 at the most on a small block. ???????Got to set up a radiator and shroud to simulate real world......just as Engine Masters did.
Wouldn`t it be called a prop then ? lolMaybe they spun the fan in water
The dyno doesn’t lie. It’s a tool for measurement, the fans tested were done after a baseline was had without any fan. The 30 hp loss was from the addition of that particular fan. Is there a loss, certainly, and that engine on that dyno showed it took, at peak, 30 hp loss.
The best way to test fans would be to use an electric motor to spin the fan and measure the current required. That will tell you the power consumed without having to use a dyno. An engine dyno isn't a very good tool for measuring small power differences, it is more of a gross measurement tool. Kind of like a yardstick. There are lots and lots of things that can change from pull to pull which is why an engine dyno can have problems measuring this kind of stuff.
Coulnd't one mitigate any variability in the dyno tests by running multiple dyno runs under each scenario and averaging the results? Just thinking out loud here, since I didn't see any of the tests.
Tell that to prostock racer !That to me says it takes alot more hp to go faster. Don't think 20hp would be much on an slip.
A prostocker would not stop at 20hp gain. They constantly look for more like all other racers. I have test and tuned at the track a bunch gaining some mph, but not much in et. I stand by what I said earlier, it takes a lot of power to see anything on your et slip and the faster you are all the more it takes to go faster yet. With a car that 60's exceptionally well you may see more gain with 20hp. My car best 60's were 1.45, so et gains come slow in my program. That plastic fan has a few stories written about it as being the worst out there for costing hp. One of the reasons people use electric fans, free up power. If your not chasing et's and it cools good, i'd run it, who cares.Tell that to prostock racer !
Ryan Johnson used to say those are very accurate. Looks like the best dyno is the track and anyone wanting to have a cooling fan shoot out should do it at the track, but then again someone would say the weather must have changed. Never gonna win that type of debate.Out of curiosity was messing with one of those et hp calculators at my et, I added 30hp, and it was almost .3 gain.
I agree w/ most all this. But a prostock racer will almost kill for 20 h.p..Ryan Johnson used to say those are very accurate. Looks like the best dyno is the track and anyone wanting to have a cooling fan shoot out should do it at the track, but then again someone would say the weather must have changed. Never gonna win that type of debate.
Andy does nice work.Sweet *** Duster
Andy does nice work.