Quote:
Originally Posted by rsr911
I'm new to diesels but fairly versed in terms of boost, you are close to correct. In order to double an engines effective compression ratio you need add one atmosphere of boost (14.7 psi or 1 bar). So a 21:1 motor on 12 PSI would be about 38:1 effective compression while the 17:1 motor at 20 PSI is about 40:1 effective. A higher compression motor will be more driveable as it has more off boost power than a lower compression motor. However a lower compression motor can make more overall power due to larger cylinder volume. Cylinder volume and displacement are not one in the same, displacement is a measure of the swept volume, the volume in which the piston travels while cylinder volume is the swept area plus the compression or fixed area which is the combustion chamber. Simply put compression ratio is simplty a function of swept area volume versus combustion chamber volume. Since a lower compression engine has more total cylinder volume it it possible to pack more air/fuel in under a boost condition than a higher compression engine under the same boost. This is one reason among several that boosted engines tend to run lower static compression than their NA counterparts. Then there's dynamic compression but that's a whole nother discertation LOL 
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Thanks for clearin it up. I knew it went somethin like that. Now I gots it. LOL
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1989 F-250 4X4 C-6 7.3 IDI, 4.10 SRW, Cobra 148GTL, 4ft bed mounted whips, 12" Powerbass sub, 600W Powerbass amp, Sony Headunit, GPC override(thanks M.L.S.C), Factory Ford aluminum rims from OBS PSD, 4" exhaust, no soupbowl, B&M shift kit
1997 F-350 4X4 E4OD 7.3 Powerstroke, 3.55 SRW. 3"DP to 4" exhaust, TS performance 6pos. chip, Quadzilla Recon XGT, DIY Tymar style intake, Atwood fiberglass cap
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