XJ Dreamin'
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Huntsville, Texas
We've all read that a motor is essentially an air pump. The piston moves down - air flows in equal to the volume vacated by the piston. After the power stroke, the combustion gases are vented. But, how much air can a 4.0L engine move.
In a hypothetically perfect air flow model (i.e. atmospheric intake manifold pressure, no blow-by, no exhaust restrictions) the 4.0L would displace 216 cfm at 3000 rpm, and 360 cfm at 5000 rpm. Of course, unless you've added a blower or tubo the intake pressure is below atmospheric and, of course, some exhaust back pressure is necessary. However, back pressure is really a matter of designing a system appropriate to the existing flow rate and is not a direct result of absolute air flow. That is, you can and should have some back pressure even if you've augmented the induction system.
Where did the numbers come from? One linear inch is 2.54 cm. One linear foot is 30.48 cm. One cubic foot is 28,316.85 cc's. One liter is 1,000 cc's. Therefore, one liter is 0.035315 cubic foot, and 4 litres is 0.141259 cubic foot. Since intake to exhaust takes 2 revolutions of the crank, then the six cylinders would displace 3000rpm times 0.141259 cubic foot divided by 2 revolutions per 4-stroke cycle, or 216 cubic feet per minute. The same formula yields 360 cfm at 5000 rpm. Of course, the actual flow rate is something less in the real world.
I got into this little exersise by reading the promotional copy at an air filter retailer's web site. They quoted 240 cfm for the oem factory air filter. Solving for rpm at 240 cfm means (even in the perfect model) you would be in trouble above 3398 rpm. It seems like any filter that will flow 400 cfm or better would be fine, but given that a filter's performance is impacted by dirt, you really need to know what the flow rate is just before it's time to clean/replace it. I would think that anything in the 600-800 cfm range would be fine, but, of course, bigger is always better :laugh3:
XJ Dreamin'
stock 2WD XJ, 4.0L HO, AW4, d35c, LT 235/75R15 A/T's
In a hypothetically perfect air flow model (i.e. atmospheric intake manifold pressure, no blow-by, no exhaust restrictions) the 4.0L would displace 216 cfm at 3000 rpm, and 360 cfm at 5000 rpm. Of course, unless you've added a blower or tubo the intake pressure is below atmospheric and, of course, some exhaust back pressure is necessary. However, back pressure is really a matter of designing a system appropriate to the existing flow rate and is not a direct result of absolute air flow. That is, you can and should have some back pressure even if you've augmented the induction system.
Where did the numbers come from? One linear inch is 2.54 cm. One linear foot is 30.48 cm. One cubic foot is 28,316.85 cc's. One liter is 1,000 cc's. Therefore, one liter is 0.035315 cubic foot, and 4 litres is 0.141259 cubic foot. Since intake to exhaust takes 2 revolutions of the crank, then the six cylinders would displace 3000rpm times 0.141259 cubic foot divided by 2 revolutions per 4-stroke cycle, or 216 cubic feet per minute. The same formula yields 360 cfm at 5000 rpm. Of course, the actual flow rate is something less in the real world.
I got into this little exersise by reading the promotional copy at an air filter retailer's web site. They quoted 240 cfm for the oem factory air filter. Solving for rpm at 240 cfm means (even in the perfect model) you would be in trouble above 3398 rpm. It seems like any filter that will flow 400 cfm or better would be fine, but given that a filter's performance is impacted by dirt, you really need to know what the flow rate is just before it's time to clean/replace it. I would think that anything in the 600-800 cfm range would be fine, but, of course, bigger is always better :laugh3:
XJ Dreamin'
stock 2WD XJ, 4.0L HO, AW4, d35c, LT 235/75R15 A/T's