Centrifugal type supercharger

Centrifugal type supercharger

The centrifugal-type supercharger is an engine-driven compressor used to increase the power output of an internal-combustion engine by increasing the amount of available oxygen by compressing air that is entering the engine. This type of supercharger is practically identical in operation to a turbocharger, with the exception that instead of exhaust gases driving the compressor via a turbine, the compressor is driven from the crankshaft by a belt, gear or chain drive.

Like any centrifugal pump, the boost provided by the centrifugal supercharger increases with the square of the speed. This means that the centrifugal design provides little boost at low engine speeds, in some cases allowing air to pass back through the supercharger, such as during deceleration. On the other hand, the design is also the most efficient, besting designs like the Roots type supercharger and twin-screw type supercharger, which have the advantage of producing boost at any speed.

Many World War II piston aircraft engines, such as the Rolls-Royce Merlin and the Daimler-Benz DB 601, utilized single-speed or multi-speed centrifugal superchargers. Because high-performance aircraft engines were typically mated to constant-speed propellers and did not see a great variation in engine speeds, the poor low-rpm performance of centrifugal superchargers was not an issue. Superchargers have since fallen from use in the aviation world, replaced by turbochargers of ever-improving quality.

Due to its design and lack of low-RPM boost it is often employed on near-standard compression engines. This means that it can facilitate airflow at higher engine RPMs, when most motors tend to have poor volumetric efficiency, without substantially increasing cylinder pressures at low- to mid-RPM operation, causing knock. This principle makes this type of supercharger ideally fit for a "bolt-on" type power adder, with no modification of the pistons and/or compression ratio necessary. Since gasoline must mix with air in a fairly narrow ratio to achieve combustion, the fact that centrifugals do not add much air at low and mid-range RPM's means fuel mileage is near-stock in the cruise RPM range. They appear to be most popular with cars that have a sufficiently large engine to provide adequate acceleration from a standing start without boost, while at the same time avoiding wheelspin. Then, the engine encounters breathing limitations in the mid-RPM range, often because it may only use two valves per cylinder. Centrifugals are also popular in places where the power-adder must be removed for frequent government engine inspections, as the exhaust system is unaffected (as it would be with a turbocharger).

However, detractors of the centrifugal-type supercharger (at least in street-driven automobile applications) note that it combines what some feel are the worst qualities of a turbocharger and a supercharger, since it doesn't develop appreciable boost at low RPM (Boost Threshold), but still uses up prodigious amounts of engine power to operate. Since it is crankshaft-driven and cannot benefit from a device like a wastegate on an exhaust-driven turbocharger to control its rotational speed, its boost threshold is always within a thousand or so RPM of redline. As such, the horsepower rating of the engine is greatly increased, but in a small part of the upper RPM range.

All supercharger types benefit from the use of an intercooler to reduce heat produced during compression.

Several popular makes of centrifugal type superchargers for automotive applications are: Preusse India, Paxton, Powerdyne, Procharger, Rotrex and Vortech.

ee also

*Centrifugal compressor


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Centrifugal-type supercharger — For more details on this topic, see centrifugal compressor. World War II Daimler Benz DB60X series aircraft engine showing centrifugal blower intake at right. This engine is a DB601 model. The centrifugal type supercharger is an engine driven… …   Wikipedia

  • Roots type supercharger — The Roots type supercharger or Roots blower is a positive displacement pump which operates by pulling air through a pair of meshing lobes not unlike a set of stretched gears. Air is trapped in pockets surrounding the lobes and carried from the… …   Wikipedia

  • Twin-screw type supercharger — The twin screw type supercharger or twin screw blower is a positive displacement type device that operates by pulling air through a pair of meshing high tolerance screws not dissimilar to a set of worm gears. Twin screw superchargers are also… …   Wikipedia

  • Centrifugal compressor — Centrifugal compressors, sometimes termed radial compressors, are a sub class of dynamic axisymmetric work absorbing turbomachinery.[1] Centrifugal impeller with a highly polished surface likely to improve performance …   Wikipedia

  • Supercharger — A supercharger is an air compressor used for forced induction of an internal combustion engine. The greater mass flow rate provides more oxygen to support combustion than would be available in a naturally aspirated engine, which allows more fuel… …   Wikipedia

  • supercharger — /sooh peuhr chahr jeuhr/, n. a mechanism for forcing air into an internal combustion engine in order to increase engine power. [1920 25; SUPERCHARGE + ER1] * * * Air compressor or blower used in piston type internal combustion engines to increase …   Universalium

  • Mikulin AM-34 — AM 34 redirects here. For the United States Navy minesweeper, see USS Swan (AM 34). AM 34 Mikulin M 34, 1932 Type …   Wikipedia

  • Carburetor — Bendix Technico (Stromberg) 1 barrel downdraft carburetor model BXUV 3, with nomenclature A carburetor (American spelling), carburettor, or carburetter (Commonwealth spelling) is a device that blends air and fuel for an internal combustion engine …   Wikipedia

  • Rolls-Royce Merlin — Merlin The Rolls Royce Merlin …   Wikipedia

  • Armstrong Siddeley Tiger — The Armstrong Siddeley Tiger was a British 14 cylinder air cooled aircraft radial engine developed by Armstrong Siddeley in the 1930s from their Jaguar engine. The engine was built in a number of different versions but performance and dimensions… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”