awdmoke wrote:
No, it wasn't you. Someone else chimed in with an unsubstantiated post about cast iron being the ultimate for retaining heat in the combustion chambers
Yeah, I hate nothing more than an unsubstanited claim.
So while some one "substantiates" the claim that Aluminum is in fact better, with more data than "all the current manufactures use it"....Here are some basic facts for ya'll to chew on....
An Internal Combustion Engine, is by definition, a Thermal Engine. That is one that converts heat into useful working power.
To get the
most power out of an internal combustion engine, you require:
Mechanical Efficiency
Volumetric Efficiency
Thermal Efficiency
Mechanical efficiency, is based on how much power is lost to friction in moving parts of the motor... the less loss the more effective.
Volumetric Efficiency has been done to death and needs no explaination
Thermal Efficiency is how effectively the engine converts the heat from the combustion process into useful working power. A typical petrol engine will only manage about 20-25% thermal efficiency.. Disease-als will do much better...
So.... for 100% Termal Efficiency (TE) we need 100% of the heat generated to be turned into power at the flywheel (or wheels even).... but heat is lost left right and center throught the motor... as mechanical friction,, heat into the cooling system,, exhaust.... AND straight out of the sides of the motor... as in heat that radiates out of the engine through the block.
Regarding that last part, one of the biggest factors is the "Thermal Conductivity" of the material the motor is made out of.... (also things like combustion space finish will most likely have a slight impact too),,,,
Thermal conductivity is measured as W/m-K (Watts per Kelvin Meter).
So a material with higher thermal conductivity, will displace/obsorb heat from one side of itself to the other faster, more effectivily and with less resistance....
The thermal conductivity of the Aluminum that most heads are cast from is 181 W/m-K
The thermal conductivity of cast iron is 80.4 W/m-k
So which one of these is going to let the most heat escape during engine opperation. Which one is going to lose the most heat. Which one is going to hold the most in.
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I don't have a 5 port Al head and a 5 port Iron head of the same exact same spec... nor do I have a dyno sitting downstairs.... So I can't tell you if that differnce in Thermal Conductivity will result in more/less power.... I'm not about to make any "unsubstantiated claims".... I'll leave that to you guys.
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So, does anyone have a technical reason as to
how Al heads produce better Mechanical, Volumetric or Thermal efficiency??????? Thus resulting in more power??? Or is the just another case of "well everyone else was jumping off the bridge so I thought I shoud too".....
<edit> Just for the record, if I was going to make a head, I would do it out of Al for cost and fast machining, and quick polishing.... basically finished cost would be much lower
and answer the O.P.... sure, I'd try an exotic head... I'll try anything once, and if I like it I'll do it again

but seriously, they're cheap enough these days... and its no secret that the power in these motors is locked up in the head