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Can a lagless future be on the horizon......!
Source: Autocar
LINK: Audi reveals electric turbocharger technology
Audi is working on a new bi-turbo engine which uses an electrically-driven turbocharger to completely eliminate turbo lag and markedly increase standing-start performance.
The prototype is based on Audiâs new 3.0-litre V6 TDI Bi-turbo engine, and is described by the company as being in the âdevelopment phaseâ. This experimental V6 diesel uses a conventional exhaust-driven main turbocharger with the small motor-driven turbocharger being used exclusively at low speeds.
Reducing turbo lag - the gap between the driver pressing the accelerator and the effect of the turboâs boost - has been the subject of engineerâs efforts for three decades. The fundamental problem is the need for a sufficient volume of exhaust gasses to be generated by the engine and then directed at the turbocharger, in order to get it running at high speed.
However, when the engine is running at lower speeds, the volume of gas isnât enough to spool the turbocharger up to its operating speed. Current turbocharged engines get around this problem by using two turbos. The smaller turbo can be brought into action with smaller volumes of exhaust gas and bridges the gap until the bigger turbo can be brought into play.
Audiâs new system, however, totally eliminates lag, greatly boosts low-speed performance and is fundamentally simpler than the twin-turbo and triple turbo set-ups used by the likes of BMW.
Audiâs electric turbocharger sits in the induction system, downstream of the conventional turbo and the intercooler and is normally not operative. However, at very low speeds - particularly from standstill - the air charged by the main turbo is re-directed through the electric turbocharger, which is already spinning at high speed, and pushed with much greater force into the engine.
A brief drive of a prototype unit in an Audi A6 showed the electric bi-turbo set-up to be dramatically effective. The torque boost from a standing start with the electric turbo in operation delivers what can probably be described as sub-supercar performance. Audiâs own tests claim that, back-to-back with a conventional V6 TDI, the electric Bi-Turbo car was two car lengths further down the road just three seconds after launch.
This early prototype showed there was a just-definable dip in the torque delivery as the electric turbo gave way to main the turbo, but it is clear that electric turbocharging is set to significantly enhance the performance of forced-induction engines and deliver a step-change in the standing-start performance.
Thereâs no news on when the system will go into production, but the next-generation 2014 Audi A4, bases on the new alloy-steel hybrid MLB platform, looks likely to receive this engine.
Source: Autocar
LINK: Audi reveals electric turbocharger technology
Audi is working on a new bi-turbo engine which uses an electrically-driven turbocharger to completely eliminate turbo lag and markedly increase standing-start performance.
The prototype is based on Audiâs new 3.0-litre V6 TDI Bi-turbo engine, and is described by the company as being in the âdevelopment phaseâ. This experimental V6 diesel uses a conventional exhaust-driven main turbocharger with the small motor-driven turbocharger being used exclusively at low speeds.
Reducing turbo lag - the gap between the driver pressing the accelerator and the effect of the turboâs boost - has been the subject of engineerâs efforts for three decades. The fundamental problem is the need for a sufficient volume of exhaust gasses to be generated by the engine and then directed at the turbocharger, in order to get it running at high speed.
However, when the engine is running at lower speeds, the volume of gas isnât enough to spool the turbocharger up to its operating speed. Current turbocharged engines get around this problem by using two turbos. The smaller turbo can be brought into action with smaller volumes of exhaust gas and bridges the gap until the bigger turbo can be brought into play.
Audiâs new system, however, totally eliminates lag, greatly boosts low-speed performance and is fundamentally simpler than the twin-turbo and triple turbo set-ups used by the likes of BMW.
Audiâs electric turbocharger sits in the induction system, downstream of the conventional turbo and the intercooler and is normally not operative. However, at very low speeds - particularly from standstill - the air charged by the main turbo is re-directed through the electric turbocharger, which is already spinning at high speed, and pushed with much greater force into the engine.
A brief drive of a prototype unit in an Audi A6 showed the electric bi-turbo set-up to be dramatically effective. The torque boost from a standing start with the electric turbo in operation delivers what can probably be described as sub-supercar performance. Audiâs own tests claim that, back-to-back with a conventional V6 TDI, the electric Bi-Turbo car was two car lengths further down the road just three seconds after launch.
This early prototype showed there was a just-definable dip in the torque delivery as the electric turbo gave way to main the turbo, but it is clear that electric turbocharging is set to significantly enhance the performance of forced-induction engines and deliver a step-change in the standing-start performance.
Thereâs no news on when the system will go into production, but the next-generation 2014 Audi A4, bases on the new alloy-steel hybrid MLB platform, looks likely to receive this engine.