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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • There are a lot of variables your missing. One thing, afr doesn’t refer to liquid fuel.

    That’s said, you need to know things like (not a totally inclusive list, just first things that come to mind).

    Pulse width of injectors Are injectors batch fire or sequential (assuming fuel injected) Speed density or hot wire flow meter What’s the max output of the pump and injectors Battery voltage Sea level or altitude Ambient temp and humidity Displacement of engine Is the engine new and fresh or old and worn out? Fuel type and rating. Pump gas? Methanol? Leaded? NO2?

    To give you a little reference, when we build smaller displacement engines for more power, we frequently use a 340lph pump. In a perfect world that means that pump can move 340 liters per hour. So in a perfect world at max duty cycle that pump (which is bigger than most factory pumps) can move absolutely maximum of 5.666666 liters per minute. There’s no way at 800rpm any engines are moving 4.5L like you’re figuring. But, pumps never run at max (maybe as a lift pump, maybe). Then you have to factor in restriction and what’s the output of the injector. It gets even more complex when you factor in fuel type and the rest of the questions I had above.

    Basically you need a LOT more info to accurately calculate consumption.






  • Hate to be the bearer of bad news, but shit is literally aerosolized any time you flush the toilet. And it’s not contained the bathroom. And it doesn’t matter if the toilet seat is up or down.

    Mythbusters did an episode on exactly that. It is worse than you’d think. I can’t find the actual episode right now, but someone wrote an article about it/the findings.

    The other brushes were placed elsewhere in the home, including the kitchen and even an office on the other end of the building, and all of the other ones were rinsed daily but not used for brushing. At the end of the month-long experiment, the toothbrushes were analyzed by a microbiologist, and they found that every toothbrush had a microscopic amount of fecal matter on them, regardless of the distance from the bathroom. source

    Bidet or not doesn’t matter. Shit is literally all over EVERYTHING. ALL the time.

    Oh, and if we really wanna get fun about it, those hand dryer things……LOL dude. Sooooo much shit going EVERYWHERE.