1. Attachments are working again! Check out this thread for more details and to report any other bugs.

improving emissions and fuel economy

Discussion in 'Other Cars' started by TxMan, Jun 18, 2012.

  1. dbcassidy

    dbcassidy Toyota Hybrid Nation, 8 Million Strong

    Joined:
    May 13, 2008
    1,581
    290
    3
    Location:
    Middlesex County, MA
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    Model:
    Two
    This could be a growing market for folks who want a "souped up final ride"

    DBCassidy
     
  2. TxMan

    TxMan Hearse driver

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2012
    50
    14
    0
    Location:
    The Matrix
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    replaced radiator, water pump, thermostat, trans cooler, and added an oil cooler today, along with an entire system flush of everything from motor oil, to axle grease. the drivetrain is taking wear, but this is expected.

    the heads are off of an unknown year 425 motor, not a '70 500 motor. my machinist tells me the serial numbers say its an OEM GM part...compression is unknown at this point, but it runs great on premium+lead additive+114 octane boost. so I'm not going to mess with it, the 425 motor was produced during the smog era, after leaded fuel-my machinist tells me he rebuilt them as if they were leaded, so I should just keep doing what I am doing.

    my programmer has sent me a blueprinted bottom end, to go with my top end, that should net me 750 horsepower with no power adders (NOS, forced induction, etc) that will probably be put in soon. he also tells me to invest in a moroso 7qt oil pan, because running the RPMs I do, if I run out of oil, my bearings will spin, and my block will need to be machined...so a $500 oil pan is better than an $1800 machining bill.

    we are also trying to figure out some form of traction control, because once those rear wheels let go, its game over. its a battle against that monster torque (all of which is available at 1800 RPM), and you just can't win.

    this sucker can TOW too, last trailer I towed had to have had been 9 thousand pounds...it was a three-axle cargo trailer with a 5200 lb '74 custom cruiser, with a whole bunch of scrap metal. it tracks great at speed with a load. it must be that long wheel base.

    I freaking love this car, I think I made the right choice.
     
  3. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

    Joined:
    Aug 14, 2006
    19,011
    4,080
    50
    Location:
    Grass Valley, CA.
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    I stopped reading at quadrojet. :)
     
  4. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus
    Now that the thread is in the right forum, I feel comfortable starting with a synopsis:
    Ok, a couple of things:
    • How much real money has been spent on this project? The numbers vary from $800, $3,500, and a bunch of extra stuff (air suspension, second ECU and injectors, alternators, and radiators) that were never costed.
    • Was all the labor 'free'?
    • Where are the pictures? We don't care about Texas weathered paint as much as getting an idea of the current body. Also, include photos of the engine compartment.
    • Is it that hard to get the weight measured?
    • Is it that hard to do a timed, maximum acceleration so we can calculate the peak HP? If you have a Garmin Nuvi, it records a log that can be used to accurately calculate acceleration over time.
    • Is it that hard to do a 'roll-down' test to measure the aerodynamic and rolling drag? Again, a Gramin Nuvi would provide the data needed to analyze the vehicle drag.
    • Can you just give us the quantity of fuel used to top-off a tank after starting with a full tank and the miles? That "45-30.1" is really bogus. It looks more like 30.1 gallons used to go ~300 miles, closer to 10 MPG.
    There is way too much funny math going on as well as absence of metrics. The funny fuel situation is especially strange . . . so you pull into a gas station and add "x" lead additive and "y" 114 octane treatment at what cost? How do you get the ratios right?

    Serious, there is not enough metrics and the one MPG example math looks funny.

    Bob Wilson
     
  5. TxMan

    TxMan Hearse driver

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2012
    50
    14
    0
    Location:
    The Matrix
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    I will try to cover what I can-I am probably $3,800 into the vehicle, I have purchased almost nothing new-all salvage yard finds and from my network of friends.

    labor done by myself, or paid for in beer.

    I trust 6,500 is good figure for weight.

    my phone tanked a while ago, I only have a burner with no cam...body and paint would be rated as 'decent'

    engine compartment is a complete trainwreck, it was more of getting everything in there instead of getting it to look good. its a driver, not a show car

    my programmer tells me it the engine is limited at around 600 hp and 650 lb/ft of torque.

    0-60 in high-range is ~7.5 seconds
    0-60 in low-range is wheelspin

    I agree that my math may be wonky on the MPGs...that figure was also all highway, windows up, AC off, no load, economical driving...

    normally driving, I tend to be pretty aggressive, AC on, and its highway/city mix. I estimate 12, but I haven't checked.

    lead additive is purchased from autozone or in the gas station. I grab a bottle and throw it in the tank...no precise math here. octane booster is either '108 octane boost' from auto zone, 9.99 a bottle. looks like this
    [​IMG]
    or whatever is in the gas station. again, not a scientific ratio. it runs bad without it, and runs acceptable with it.
     
    bwilson4web likes this.
  6. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus
    Thanks! This clears up some unknowns:
    There are a bunch of web pages that will do the math so I started with:
    0-60 mph Calculator for Cars

    It looks you get 7.508 second with:
    • 383 hp
    • 6,500 lbs curb weight
    • rear wheel drive
    • automatic transmission
    This begins to make a lot more sense and sets a lower boundary on the performance. Note this is power at the tires and does not include transmission and drive train losses.

    Have you tried just premium in the car without the additives? It may be they are not doing anything for you. As a suggested protocol:
    1. Put a 5 gallon container of just premium in the back, make sure it is secure.
    2. Run the car dry so you'll know exactly what you have.
    3. Add the 5 gallons and drive to a gas station with trusted premium to fill up. (If you know the gas tank capacity, you can now measure how much of the 5 gallons it took to reach the station.) A 5 gallon tank at 10 MPG should give you a 50 mile range. Use a second spare can if you think it might need more. Gas weights 6 lbs/gallon so you want to be able to heft the 30 lbs without a whole lot of spillage (fire hazard.)
    4. On the way, see if you can induce "knock" (back off quickly if it does.) This lets you know for sure if the additives are really needed or just another way to transfer you bucks to the auto store.
    5. Do your mix at the station IF there is evidence of knock. But now you'll start to baseline the ratio.
    Bob Wilson
     
  7. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus
    Understand I'm mostly interested in the engineering and if we can get some better metrics, it may be possible to squeeze out better performance. But it needs to be done piece-wise, not shotgun.

    Bob Wilson
     
  8. TxMan

    TxMan Hearse driver

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2012
    50
    14
    0
    Location:
    The Matrix
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    the 0-60 figure includes me accounting for wheelspin.

    the low range is there for towing, I know what I am doing...this is not a performance vehicle, its a work horse. although the performance is great.

    online 0-60 calculators do not account for torque, number of speeds in the trans, diff gears, tires, and SO many variables.

    I account 17% transmission/drivetrain loss. according to my machinist, this is a good ballpark figure for a 700R4.

    under the hood we had more space then we needed, but making hood clearance was the issue. the intake mani, a dual-quad style (either an offenhouser, or a knock off) + the throttle bodies + air filters (MAF inside filters) was getting pretty close.

    we were working in my friends diesel shop, or my garage, or the salvage yard shop. all fully outfitted, and indoors.

    ECU is off of an '08 pontiac G8 GXP (supercharged LS2) injectors are for a TT supercharged LS9 set up. fuel delivery is not a problem.

    the phone insurance company has revoked my claim for a new phone, (water damage) and it will be a long time before I get a replacement. I will try to remember, and have one of my friends take a few pictures and e-mail them to me.

    also at this point, gas mileage means little to me, I love this car for how it feels, how it looks, how it drives...there is little I would change about it, and if 12 mpg is my price,then so be it.

    finally, the 'cadillac 500' forum site is completely useless.
     
  9. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus
    First, I thank you for continuing the thread. There aren't a whole lot of folks around who really understand what we're talking about:
    The 0-60 mph time and vehicle mass is all it takes to calculate the change in kinetic energy over the interval. This energy change over the interval defines the power needed to achieve that performance. IF you can add enough mass to avoid wheel spin, the change in weight will automatically be factored in and the net horsepower will be more accurate.

    BTW, I agree with the 17% transmission loss estimate. A lot of heat is dumped overboard from that source. Of all the "low hanging fruit," a good, manual transmission and heavy duty clutch would be the easiest. You'd probably save 5% of the vehicle weight and reduce transmission losses to 6-8%.

    Do you have a way to pipe 'cold' air to the carb vs the radiator heated air? Reducing air inlet temperature will give you more charge and reduce the knock risk.
    Hummm, ask your programmer if a laptop can monitor any metrics from the ECU. Does it have an OBD interface port even if you don't have the connector in the cabin? This could give you excellent data even with a crappy OBD reader but really great data with a Scanguage. You might not see everything of interest but there could be a lot of good info.
    I used to have an iPod Touch, the WiFi only version of an iPhone without a camera. Then one day it slipped and took a coffee baptism and now only exists in electronic heaven. I went to replace it and found an iPad for twice the price but four times the screen area . . . that was an easy sale. I also bought a case with a built-in, Bluetooth keyboard. This has become my constant companion.
    No problem here. I'm a firm believer in the right tool for the right job. To my eyes, you've adapted the largest station wagon available to your needs.
    I fully understand. Until I had to replace my crashed 91 Camry and chose a Prius, I really didn't pay much attention to cars. I had rebuilt a 1500 cc VW engine (I'd put in a centrifical advance distributor, headers, and replaced the cross-belted tires with early radials; ) three clutch changes in the one of the worlds worst small cars, a Chevy Chevette; dealt with a Model A Ford in high school, and; kept my wife's 400 cu. Fury wagon running. Out on the carport is her 1993 Coachman RV that hasn't moved since repairs two years ago (her birthday present ... horse, water, drink.) But my attitude changed after we got our first, 2003 Prius.

    I found the only people who understood what I was talking about were the other gear heads at work . . . the guys with a 10-20 year old Corvette and a Mustang convertible. They understood the vocabulary but didn't really understand how close to the metal Prius technical stuff people can get. But that was OK, I just needed someone to bounce ideas off of who at least had a clue.

    I've been to other car forums and noticed how few really understand the technology and engineering. I don't fault ignorance but after a while you get tired to talking to others whose eyes glaze over with bolvine ignorance and you realized 'the lights are on but no one is home.' They are alive but their brains are disengaged.

    Bob Wilson
     
  10. TxMan

    TxMan Hearse driver

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2012
    50
    14
    0
    Location:
    The Matrix
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    I think the el dorados of the year had a hood scoop, and I think an eldo hood will mount to a fleetwood front clip. will look into it.

    I think someone has a dyno, I will look into it...all of the math to it just seems off if its not professionally done.

    the computer has an OBD port on it, and recall-I am a diesel technician, so I have a $2,400 scanner...

    the problem is that since the computer controlled the trans and a whole lot more then just the engine, I get several dozen codes every time I hook up to it. I don't go anywhere near the tune, in school they taught us that the best tune was from the factory, and to revert it to stock programming and everything will be fine-although this isn't a large stationary diesel, I will let my programmer take care of that.

    I have never had luck with apple products, they were too consumer quality, and seemed to be designed to break screens so they make more money. I had an HTC evo, and that was a business quality phone, but again, not waterproof :( my friend had to use an ipad for the same job, and it lasted less then a week, and he had quite the list of complaints on it. the bluetooth has nowhere near the range to connect to the generators, as the toughbook I have, I can do everything on a site without leaving my leather and AC.

    the caddy site is better at logistics, and thats it. they basically rebuild the engine according to summit racing, or some hot rod article, and swap it into some other car. that is the extent of their expertise, not an all-around project like this. I never would have expected that I would have gotten support for this car on this site.
     
  11. a_gray_prius

    a_gray_prius Rare Non-Old-Blowhard Priuschat Member

    Joined:
    Jun 13, 2008
    2,927
    782
    0
    Location:
    IL
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    I stopped reading at hearse and started thinking of how great the car would be to pick up goth chicks. :)
     
  12. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus

    PriusChat is good but as I was driving back to the house, I thought I'd suggest:

    Fuel Economy, Hypermiling, EcoModding News and Forum - EcoModder.com

    These are efficiency, gear-heads, and one of the few sites where folks are 'non-demoninational' about improving the efficiency of their ride or project. I think if you were to post an introduction of your project you'd find a lot of willing and helpful suggestions.

    PriusChat is more advocacy and as you've discovered, we're generally 'not mean' about it. If you're posting in the right forum and not making a pest of yourself, folks are fairly tolerant. There are actually 'pest' forums (aka., Fred's House of Pancakes.) PriusChat has a good mix of technologists and advocates.

    With rare exception, I don't think we're out to 'convert the world'. But it seems we get a few 'missionaries' trying to convert us (aka., diesel and EV/Volt) and the occasional anarchist trying to 'leave a pile.' With one or two exceptions, facts and data are a powerful 'clue by four' and life moves on.

    Bob Wilson
     
  13. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus
    Just a couple of late thoughts IF you are into experimentation:
    • Check if your scanner can record any metrics such as MAF, ICE rpm, and poke around to see if the transmission _MIGHT_ have torque. These three are enough to make a BSFC chart for engine efficiency to look for 'sweet spots.'
    • On the cold air, I was thinking one of those aluminum dryer hoses with clamp might be routed to a cold air source for the air cleaner. The goal is reducing the risk of knock and allowing use of straight fuel without the additives.
    • You might look at replacing just the rear tires to keep the costs down. Look for low-rolling resistance and consider a larger diameter tire to add a little more top-end, rear ratio. Every time you can slow the engine and transmission rpm you are gaining a little efficiency. Warning, you may have to recalibrate your speedometer.
    • Poor-man's variable cylinder . . . if you have individual injectors per cylinder . . . Changing the head to keep the valves closed it not likely to do much good BUT if you could disable the injector on every other cycle when at cruise and now totally screw-up the ECU, you'd be able to cruise with the throttle more 'wide open' to reduce pumping loss. The heat load will be reduced as the engine would in effect become a 4-cylinder at cruise speed. What I don't know is the 'load' of a 'no gas' cycle on the engine. But I suspect the improved efficiency of the rotating, four power cylinders might give a measurable MPG improvement.
    • Cooled exhaust gas? If you can tap the exhaust pipe, as far down as possible, and run a high temperature pipe forward possibly through a 'radiator' to cool it, you could meter it into the engine at cruise speed and improve efficiency. The inert, exhaust gas allows the throttle body to open wider, reducing pumping losses and reduce combustion temperature. If the ECU uses fuel enrichment to keep from burning the valves (a sweet spot boundary,) the cooled exhaust would keep the car in a leaner burn mode at higher power settings.
    These all vary in price-performance-risk and it is your car. However, the folks over at www.ecomodder.comwould be good sounding boards.

    BTW, I've got the parts and just need to install them in our 2003 Prius to make it E85 compatible. E85 naturally has a very high octane and burns 'cool'. My earlier testing suggests the 1.5L Prius engine has the smarts to adjust to a wide range of fuels so I'm looking forward to this test.

    GOOD LUCK!
    Bob Wilson
     
  14. TxMan

    TxMan Hearse driver

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2012
    50
    14
    0
    Location:
    The Matrix
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    [​IMG]601/365 - Hearse Girls at HearseCon 2011 | Flickr - Photo Sharing!

    as far as changing tires and messing with the grip, I do need the grip...I use this to tow. I keep the tires just above recommended pressure ?(superior, not max sidewall pressure)

    turns out the eldos didn't have a hood scoop. I will ask my programmer about getting a fiberglass one, and making a scoop similar to what was on the earlier GTO's.

    el dorado.
    [​IMG]
    GTO.
    [​IMG]

    and on making it shut down 4 cylinders, my diesel training kicks in and says that going lean is NOT a good idea, and should be avoided. in 1982 cadillac equipped their engines with a similar feature, and it was a complete flop. maybe modern technology will make it better though...
     
  15. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2005
    27,123
    15,389
    0
    Location:
    Huntsville AL
    Vehicle:
    2018 Tesla Model 3
    Model:
    Prime Plus
  16. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

    Joined:
    Feb 7, 2006
    21,714
    11,315
    0
    Location:
    eastern Pennsylvania
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    If you keep with the octane booster, you'll save a little cash by just using paint/lacquer thinner. Toluene is commonly added to gas to raise octane by the refinery, or more accurately, some is left in after the the reformation process since it is more valuable on its own. Same with xylene. One or the other can be found in the paint section of the home improvement store. More than likely one of them that is the active ingredient in the off the shelf octane booster. The majority of that bottle is filled with kerosene to bulk it up.

    Alcohols are also octane boosters. Methanol and ethanol have a lower rating than toluene, but isopropanol is actually a point or two higher. 91% rubbing alcohol is also easy to find. It is hydrophilic but not hygroscopic like ethanol. Meaning it mixes with water but won't absorb moisture out of the air. If you don't want to add the 9% water in the rubbing alcohol, add salt. Isopropanol doesn't mix with salt solutions. The salt dissolves in the water, which no long mixes with the alcohol, and they seperate like oil and, well, water. I personally don't worry about the water when I add a splash of the 91% to the lawn equipment to help with starting and drying out the fuel.

    Acetone supposedly has an octane rating of 150, but it can strip the car's paint. It is also hygroscopic like ethanol.

    Octane rating - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
     
  17. TxMan

    TxMan Hearse driver

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2012
    50
    14
    0
    Location:
    The Matrix
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    update.

    drove the car for several thousand miles, ate up 2 sets of rear tires and a transmission, took it to a local car show while visiting california, and was offered 11k for my engine.

    I sold the engine, and stuck a goodwrench 350 in it to get back home, where we played around with ideas for what to do for a powerplant now.

    we looked at crate motor sites, there is no shortage of _______charged LS_ motors for >20k that make huge power, but that would be the obvious answer, and I always take the road less traveled-being normal bugs me.

    we played with the idea of putting an 8v71ti motor, but it was nowhere near meeting hood clearance

    then we found a company out of california called NRE-Nelson Racing Engines.


    and thats the current plan. right now I am in a craigslist special '95 F250 with the international 7.3 in it, until I can come up with the money for the BBC 632 TT they dyno at the beginning of that video.