Hi Mike, CFM to RPM is easy... a 2.1L engine pulls 2.1L of air per RPM. One liter = 0.0353146667 cubic feet. So a 2.1L engine at 1000 RPM pulls 74.1608 CFM
Happy Trails, Greg Potts 1973/74/75/77/79 Westfakia "Bob the Tomato" www.pottsfamily.ca/westfakia www.busesofthecorn.com On 4-Nov-06, at 2:06 PM, Mike Bucchino wrote: > You could bolt an AFM to a flowbench and run tests to determine these > voltage changes for a given CFM, but you'd need to know how CFM > equates to > the engine's rpm, |
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