That is very true, but where the port in your cylinder head may be (say) two inches in diameter, the internal flow path inside the flow bench may have four inch, or even larger diameter minimum flow areas.maineSS wrote:One of the things which always surprises me is the effort people make to improve port flow is seldom seen in flowbench internal flow.
The answer to that, is that the sensitivity of any sharp edge orifice to up stream turbulence depends on the pressure drop across the orifice.But, how big does your orifice box have to be to absorb an incoming jet? Imagine you're standing in front of someone with an electric leafblower. He turns it on, you hold your palm in front of the jet and back up until you no longer feel it.
If the air flowing through the orifice is like a gentle summer breeze, with hardly any pressure drop at all, even the slightest up stream disturbance is going to upset things considerably.
But with a relatively high orifice pressure drop, the relative fury and violence at the orifice is so great, that it becomes far more tolerant of up stream air conditions.
Taking that to the ultimate, if an orifice goes into total sonic choke, nothing including a massive increase of up stream air pressure will make it flow any more.
So the tip is, keep all the internal flow areas at least as large as the test hole.
Fit as large a settling volume as convenient immediately up stream of the orifice.
And use as high a design orifice pressure drop as you have blower pressure/horsepower to support.