Nitrous oxide can double the horsepower of most engines with less effort and
money being spent than any other modification. Even the "smog people" are
usually happy. A nitrous engine can be built as a stock rebuild or it can be a dedicated
effort to maximize the total performance package. As more power is generated,
more waste heat, exhaust air flow and combustion pressures push the limits of
engine strength. Often more beef is needed in the drive train and tires. All stock factory engines are built with a safety factor when it comes to
RPM, HP produced, cylinder pressure, engine cooling, etc. If you are only going
to use a 100 HP nitrous setup on a 300 cubic inch or larger engine, built in
factory safety factors are probably sufficient. As power output levels are
raised engine modifications are usually prudent. The most common mistake made when using nitrous oxide injection concerns
ignition timing. A normally aspirated engine makes its best power when peak
cylinder pressures occur between 14 and 18 degrees after TDC. KB Pistons usually
require 34 degrees BTDC ignition timing at full mechanical advance to achieve
proper ATDC peak cylinder pressure. The total time from spark flash to the point
of peak pressure is typically 48 to 52 degrees. If an engine is producing 30% of
its power from nitrous, the maximum cylinder pressure will occur too close to
TDC to avoid run away detonation. If ignition does not get retarded, good-bye
horsepower and head gaskets. The key to getting max HP from a max nitrous engine
is to shift the maximum cylinder pressure event progressively further after
TDC.
There is no free lunch in horsepower equations because
to get 1000 PSI above the piston in the second example takes twice as much fuel
and energy as the 1000 PSI in the first example. What this offsetting of the
peak pressure does is allow us to use the extra fuel mix available to a nitrous
engine without breaking and melting things. The system that allows us to
postpone maximum cylinder pressure is ignition timing retard. To a lessor extent
short rod ratios, lower compression ratios, high RPM, aluminum heads, a tight
quench, a rich fuel mixture, a small carburetor and hotter cams tend to delay
maximum cylinder pressure. Understand that, in our quest to delay cylinder pressure’s peak time, more is
not necessarily better. Instead, consider that the ideal cylinder pressure would
be just short of detonation pressure and this pressure would be maintained from
top dead center, and as long as possible after TDC. If timing is really late,
you won’t build enough cylinder pressure to start the car, let alone drive it.
The 1000 PSI pressure in the example is not the maximum allowable combustion
pressure but, rather, a comfortable pressure for illustration of the work
principle. Some nitrous manufacturers recommend, "retard the timing two degrees for each
fifty horse power of nitrous". Other nitrous kits have the flame speed
artificially slowed by the intentional use of a rich fuel to nitrous ratio. The
maximum performance engine with a heavy nitrous load must achieve peak cylinder
pressure progressively further after TDC. The heavy load engine will have the
fuel and oxygen mix to make high cylinder pressures, with the combustion chamber
size being drastically increased due to the piston being on its way toward
bottom dead center. The strongest engines have less compression ratio, less
spark advance, and more nitrous. I have tried to explain the reason for a spark retard system in a Nitrous
engine. However, many people just don’t like the idea of any retard. They say,
"retard timing and exhaust heat goes up". It usually does in a stock non nitrous
engine because lower peak cylinder pressure slows the burning. If the timing is
retarded in a non-nitrous engine, the exhaust opens before the fuel mix is
finished burning and exhaust temperatures go up. Piston temperatures usually go
down and exhaust valve temperature goes up. In the nitrous engine, exhaust
temperature goes up for several reasons. The first is that the power output has
gone up considerably. More power usually produces more waste heat. Second, the
need to keep maximum cylinder pressures within reason has dictated that the
biggest part of the fire happens closer to the exhaust valve opening time. There
just isn’t enough piston travel to extract all the energy out of the charge
before the exhaust valve opens. Now, we could and sometimes do, open the exhaust
valve later so more combustion pressure energy can be used to turn the crank.
The trade off is negative torque on the exhaust stroke. If we still have
significant cylinder pressure in the cylinder as the piston moves from BDC to
TDC on the exhaust stroke, your net Hp falls drastically. A real problem at
higher RPM. You can improve maximum power stroke efficiency and minimize exhaust pumping
losses by running the engine at lower RPM and/or improving the exhaust valve
size, lift and port design. A big nitrous engine likes everything about the
exhaust to be big. If it flows good enough the cylinder will blow down by bottom
dead center, even at high RPM with relatively mild exhaust valve timing. There
are many variables in the design and development of an all out nitrous engine. A
mistake will cause the melt down of any brand of piston. The high strength of
the KB piston will withstand detonation and severe abuse. Unfortunately, all
pistons will melt and when cylinder pressure limits are exceeded, run away
detonation can occur. The excess detonation heat makes the plugs, valves and
piston so hot the ignition system alone can not be used to shut the engine down.
Continued operation worsens the situation to the point of a total melt down.
Designing a maximum performance nitrous engine is more of an exercise in heat
management than it is in engine building. A lack of a sufficient fuel supply is probably the most common killer of the
nitrous engine. If you add a 300 HP kit to your present 300 HP engine, your fuel
requirements roughly double and a shortage doesn’t just slow you down, it melts
things. An electric fuel pump and fuel line devoted entirely to the nitrous
equipment is recommended. Some people add a small "race fuel" tank just for the
nitrous. If you are using a diaphragm mechanical pump to supply fuel to the
carburetor, it is worth while to increase the fuel line I.D. If the carburetor
goes lean while the nitrous is on, the pistons can melt even with a rich nitrous
fuel jetting. The large fuel line trick (1/2" dia.) only makes a major
improvement in the operation of diaphragm mechanical fuel pumps. It is a waste
of time on most electric applications. An electric pump pushing a mechanical
pump is not recommended and does not do well at high engine RPM. A large size
line is effective with a mechanical pump, even if you use smaller fittings at
the tank, fuel pump and carburetor. The advantage of the 1/2" large line is not
related to the steady state flow rate of the line. The advantage relates to the
acceleration time and displacement of the pulsating flow common to the
mechanical pump. High compression ratios can be used with nitrous but shifting the maximum
pressure after top dead center becomes more and more difficult. I prefer to use
street compression ratios and then just work with adding more nitrous to get
desired horsepower levels. We are currently testing some pistons specifically designed for Nitrous use.
Current "off the shelf" pistons have been successfully run with a 500 HP nitrous
kit combined with a Dr. Jacob's nitrous control system. Most of our effort has
been to develop new ideas that will push the limit of nitrous technology. More
testing is planned with a piston especially plated to reduce detonation. A beginner would do well to build a reliable high performance engine first,
then advance to nitrous, turbo or supercharging. This makes for more fun, more
education with less head ache and money spent. The book titled "Nitrous Oxide
Injection" by David Vizard, published by S-A Design is stocked in any good speed
shop and should be required reading by anyone wanting to run nitrous
successfully.
Nitrous-Naughty and Nice

Cylinder pressure of 1000 PSI at TDC, (FIG.1), can drop to 500 PSI with
less than 3/8" of piston travel, (FIG. 2). If you can manage to get 1000
PSI in the same engine after the 3/8" travel, (FIG.3) , the pistons will
have to travel an additional 3/4" to lower the cylinder pressure to 500PSI,
(FIG.4). Work is defined as a force times distance. An average pressure,
(750 PSI X 12-1/2 sq. in.), times distance in feet, (3/8"divided by12),
equals 293 foot pounds of work.
Our
second example, because it has twice the chamber volume above the piston
location, must move twice as far to lower the cylinder pressure by 1/2
Since all the other numbers, by our own definition are the same, the force
multiplied
by a distance twice that of the first example will equal twice the work done,
586 foot pounds of work.
John Erb
Chief Engineer,
KB Pistons
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