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The Zen of Purge, Part 2If you look up purge in the dictionary you find all kinds of examples, most of which sound disgusting. Some refer to bloodily removing a head of state from power or perhaps the transference of that strange pizza to the porcelain round file. A more accurate description pertaining to nitrous is to evacuate. We want to evacuate or get rid of some unwanted air and gaseous nitrous and control the pressure at the same time. Unwanted? Sounds counterproductive to our goals of shoving as much as we can cram down the engines throat without choking it. However, purging does serve a couple of useful purposes. Consistency is important in tuning a nitrous car. If you do not launch at the same bottle pressure each time you will not be able to tell what, if any, changes you need to make the next time. Nitrous pressure is something you do have control over, at least at launch, so it is in your best interest to dial it in. GET THE AIR OUT BOTTLE PRESSURE DEPENDS ON TEMPERATURE
Trick launch pressures abound but we will use the most commonly used number of 900 lbs for our discussion. 900 lbs matches up to most of the manufacturers baseline settings. More important is the fact that drag racing is done in (hopefully) nice weather and 85 degrees and 900 lbs just happens to match up nicely. Most of the time anyway. Granted, you could run lower pressures and tune the fuel jet accordingly, but its a bigger pain than trying to keep the bottle pressure consistent. The best advice is to pick a number and stick with it. Higher pressures are a problem however. Many of the solenoids will not open above 1100 lbs so there is not much point in taking that risk. VOLUME KEEPS PRESSURE UP The biggest problem with bottle pressure is how to keep it at the pressure point you desire. If its too high, a wet towel will bring it down fairly quickly. I am assuming that its about 1000 lbs when I say that. If you just topped off the bottle and have extreme 1800 lbs of pressure, well, you have a problem. Its going to take a while, especially on a hot race day. Many racers keep an ice chest handy just for this occasion. WARMING THE BOTTLEThe downside as I see it is most bottles would have to be turned open since the sensor is in the main line. This is not a good idea since a leaking solenoid seal could lead to a hood launching condition. If you choose this type of heater I recommend that you change your bottle valve to one on the Super Hi Flow valves that have a port available on the bottle side of the valve. This way the pressure can be controlled without having the main line and solenoids exposed. Another warming technique being used is what I call the bottle jacuzzi. The bottles are submersed in a water container that uses a hot water heating element and preferably a thermostat. The idea, and it works, is to saturate both the bottle and the contents to a desired temperature. My motorcycle customers are limited to a little 2 lb bottle and they have found that if they start the jacuzzi process a day in advance they have minimal pressure drop at the end of the quarter mile. Food for thought. DONT DO THIS Case in point. I was tig welding on my dragster one evening about a foot from the bottle. The shop was quiet and when I was done I heard this little hiss. The heat from the welding had progressed through the chassis and metal brackets to warm the bottle. Now I have to tell you I was real surprised by that hiss. It turned out to be a flaw in the bottom of the bottle. When it cooled to room temperature it was fine. Subsequent testing showed that if the pressure exceeded 1000 lbs it would open up a leak. Moral of story. What would have happened if an open flame had been used? No shop, no Dave, and a hopefully interesting obituary!! Nuff said? I made a lamp out of the bottle, by the way. A BETTER WAY, BUT… A BAD EXAMPLE INSULATION PURGE AFTER A RUN I think street machines need to pay attention to this even more. The car sits out in the asphalt parking lot for 8 hours while you work. Think hatch back microwave. You jump in the car and IF you dont have a leak (you did shut the bottle off last night?) you may have a really lean condition due to the high pressure. Get a purge valve and a gauge!! If the pressure is too extreme it will blow the solenoid plunger and shut off the nitrous altogether. A lesser of two evils, but still annoying. If you do all the above and the pressure is extreme, do not turn the bottle on. Take a wrench and crack the main feed line open a little at the solenoid. Then open the bottle valve slowly till the pressure drops to reasonable limits. Take care when doing this if your solenoid and bottle are in the same vicinity because leaking nitrous will burn you like RIGHT NOW. Been there. DYNAMIC PURGING
Now I admit it, I have done this. Most nitrous racers have at one time or another. I do not, however, believe it to be a good thing. Any time you free rev an engine, with or without nitrous, you shorten its life. The reason is that the components move so fast that the oil system cant keep up, so for a brief nano-second in time there is the potential for the rod bearing to touch the crank without the oil cushion. This touch increases the bearing clearances and it just gets bigger and bigger as time goes on. No load means that the pistons and rods are swinging out and jerking back in the opposite direction. The load keeps a cushion effect that keeps things under control. In the bad old days of stick shifts and no rev limiters it was a given that if you missed a gear you must immediately change the bearings. If you did not it was a sure bet you would be picking the rods off the ground within the next 5-6 laps. Its up to you. To be an effective nitrous tuner you must get as many things under control as possible in order to be fast and consistent. Purging the bottle is just one of those tools. Take control. The good news is that its not an expensive project compared to all the stuff you already purchased.
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