JayTheCPA
Well-Known Member
I took a walk through the Tech Library and read observations where it looked like a consensus of (presuming I got all of the details / assertions correct):
> need new head design to limit / control heat leach from the precup chamber to the coolant.
> probably need new piston design to allow longer valve durations for scavenging; turbo charging seems to compound the issue.
> maybe move the precup chamber to a central location relative to the cylinder.
Some of the material were long reads. :bigeyes2:
Solve the precup chamber's heat leach and system efficiency goes up.
Solve the scavenging issue and it allows for higher RPM's and probably better efficiency.
In terms of the precup design, did not get a strong impression that it had as much potential as the heat leach and / or scavenge issues. Trust me, I am on-board with the idea of getting more from the 6.5 as much as everybody else and the less invasive / costly the mod the better. Especially since another consensus was that the IDI principles that the 6.5 used were easily traceable to the early 1900's with not much in the way of notable R&D.
Naturally, am open to somebody correcting my interpretations.
> need new head design to limit / control heat leach from the precup chamber to the coolant.
> probably need new piston design to allow longer valve durations for scavenging; turbo charging seems to compound the issue.
> maybe move the precup chamber to a central location relative to the cylinder.
Some of the material were long reads. :bigeyes2:
Solve the precup chamber's heat leach and system efficiency goes up.
Solve the scavenging issue and it allows for higher RPM's and probably better efficiency.
In terms of the precup design, did not get a strong impression that it had as much potential as the heat leach and / or scavenge issues. Trust me, I am on-board with the idea of getting more from the 6.5 as much as everybody else and the less invasive / costly the mod the better. Especially since another consensus was that the IDI principles that the 6.5 used were easily traceable to the early 1900's with not much in the way of notable R&D.
Naturally, am open to somebody correcting my interpretations.